With this collection, she proves a compelling essayist...her voice direct, lucid, and fearless. All the pieces are enjoyable and often surprising, even when rather slight. But the most substantial ones are memorable—even unforgettable. They deftly straddle the personal and the political ... Her particular perspective sheds light on the complexity of race in the United States; the essay follows her education in a history that is not straightforwardly her own, and yet is inescapable.
... opens with its exhilarating eponymous piece, encompassing her heady childhood experiences of flying internationally as an unaccompanied minor as well as the giddy experience of executing a loop de loop in a light aircraft. Both perceptive and informative, that essay sets the tone for the rest of this collection, in which Forna delves into a dynamic tapestry of resonant topics: the various elements that she explores in her fiction — migration, war and its aftermath, familial love, friendship, curiosity, resilience — are equally present in her nonfiction ... Forna retains a lightness of touch and depth of insight in her writing, alongside perceptible senses of both self-awareness and humor ... New essays and previously published ones — part of Forna’s work over the past decade — nestle easily and complementarily together here, offering a revealing glimpse into the author’s peripatetic life, commitment to family and community, and deep appreciation for life’s oddities, quirks, and moments of human compassion ... Forna’s perspective covers the salient, often momentous details, as well as a larger picture of the world and of her place in it ... Forna has a clear aptitude for being at home wherever she lands ... Forna’s compassionate streak, her interest in what humanizes us, is apparent throughout ... Forna has a fine command over both language and life — her sense of agency is pleasurably palpable — and her vivid, keenly observed anecdotes make her tendency toward hope all the more reassuring ... evocative, provocative.
... a smart accompaniment to any travel, armchair or actual ... Bookstores are filled with personal essay collections; this one, by roving both farther and deeper than most, stands above ... In recent years, the production of literary essays has metastasized so that something once rare is now a vast surplus overloading online reading outlets. When Forna dips into a subject that’s been widely addressed, such as insomnia in 'The Watch' or the male gaze in 'Power Walking,' the pieces fall a bit flat ... Yet for the most part, she stands above the fray. She weaves in experiences that are so individual another essayist would make them the center of a piece, like the time she flew a plane on a loop-de-loop or when she had an audience with the Queen. Here they are part of the texture of her understanding of the world. Her work is intelligent, curious and broad ... This essay collection shows us, in various ways of defining home and understanding who we are, that being an anywhere is not a deficit; it’s an accomplishment.
Focused primarily on the passenger seats of airplanes, it luxuriates in the experience of vast flights to far-flung places, its language as soaring as the clouds casting shadows on the oceans below ... Of course, The Window Seat was clearly written before covid-19. As the rest of The Window Seat: Notes from a Life in Motion unfolds, the initial essay stops feeling like a piece of travel porn and becomes a framework that holds together a collection that defies convention. It may just be the perfect post-pandemic read, and Forna the ideal post-pandemic writer ... Like human memory, the story of Forna’s father doesn’t unfold linearly. It is masterfully woven into both the lives of other people and the changing world around Mohamed himself ... As we grapple to make sense of a world that’s both been brought closer together and separated further by a global pandemic, maybe it’s writers like her who can help us decide what comes next — and how to better understand each other along the way.
Aminatta Forna is one of those writers who I wish was more well known in the United States ... one can hope that readers will come away from these rich and rewarding pieces with a new understanding of an important literary voice—and a greater appreciation of the complexities of the world in which we live ... Perhaps those who already are familiar with Forna's longer work will enjoy this book most and will see in it evidence of research and family history that underpin her memoir and fiction efforts. But for many other readers, The Window Seat, with its promise of a glimpse into many different places and ways of life, will give them their first taste of this thoughtful, insightful author and will want to seek out more of her work.
The varied essay lengths give readers time to breathe in between, before they embark on another of Forna’s adventures ... These essays are raw, informative, and often entertaining; fans of essayists like Roxane Gay will devour this book quickly and be left wanting more of Forna’s stories.
The award-winning Sierra Leonean novelist looks at her life through multiple lenses ... This collection ranges across topics as varied as colonialism, childhood memories, and chimpanzees. Her gaze takes in big events like Iran’s Islamic Revolution of 1979 and the Trump inauguration, but she’s at her best when coaxing hard-won wisdom out of everyday details ... Forna glides smoothly among memoir, travel writing, history, and literary studies ... The prose is intimate and conversational—'I do not have resting bitch face' —but the feeling of chatting over coffee belies the attention she gives to each sentence ...Caught between worlds, Forna prefers to see them all from above, no doubt while on the plane to her next destination. A grand sweep of peoples and cultures united by a longing for what home really means.
Novelist Forna explores notions of place, identity, and movement in this bracing collection ... The essays flit from childhood to adulthood and from place to place, which can at times be disorienting ... Forna is a razor sharp prose stylist ... her attention to detail moves the collection forward ... Full of careful observations, Forna’s meditations hit the mark.