Profiles in Black History: Imbolo Mbue

Profiles in Black History is a project of our Justice Works Anti-Racism Team. A new profile will be spotlighted every day during Black History Month.


Imbolo Mbue

Imbolo Mbue

Imbolo Mbue

“Imbolo Mbue was born in Limbe, Cameroon in 1983. Her area of Cameroon had been previously colonized by Great Britain, and when she was 17 she came to the United States with a sponsorship from her aunt. She became a U.S. Citizen in 2014, and lived in Chicago for a few months before moving to New Jersey and earning her B. A. in business administration from Rutgers University and then Columbia University for an M. A. Eleven years after immigrating to the United States, Mbue was inspired to begin writing after reading a copy of Toni Morrison’s “Song of Solomon.” Prior, she had neither formal training nor experience writing. Mbue published her debut novel Behold the Dreamers in 2016.  Before publication, her book was rejected for three years by various agents. Behold the Dreamers was published by Random House and sold for at least $1 million. … Behold the Dreamers has been translated into 11 languages, adapted into an opera, and is about to become a stage play in addition to the potential for a movie. [Mbue] currently lives in New York City — she started in Harlem and now lives in downtown Manhattan — and has been a professor at Columbia University. She says that her character, Vince Edwards, was largely based off of her students she was teaching at Columbia. She considers herself to be a fan of tennis and she still uses a Discman, and she is grateful to the women who made sacrifices before her so that she can have the freedom she does today.”

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Rebecca Riley is a writer and filmmaker who lives in North County San Diego.