Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Pierces the Veil of Donald Trump’s Private Life in a New Short Story

The celebrated Nigerian novelist Adichie produces a new short story on the American election for The New York Times book review.

In a brilliant move, The New York Times Book Review asked acclaimed Nigerian novelist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie to pen an original short story about the U.S. election. It’s part of series that will continue into the fall.

The election has provided a lot of fodder for fiction. For Adichie, the natural choice was to pierce the veil of Donald Trump’s private life with Arrangements.

Adichie, whose short story Monday of Last Week is being adapted into a film (could this be next?), presents a simple narrative from the perspective of Melania, Trump’s wife, as she makes arrangements to order “unusal orchids” for her parents’ 50th anniversary party.

From Adichie’s imagining of the Trump’s domestic life, we learn that Melania is an agreeable wife, sensitive to her husband’s fragile ego that is ever in need of praise. The entertaining American election serves as a mere backdrop to the quaintness of their personal life.

If you’re expecting a heavy dose of drama, beyond Melania’s strained relationship with her step daughter, Ivanka, sibling rivalries and the angst of a trophy wife married to a true narcissist who intimately understands how to delicately walk on eggshells, then you may want to turn the TV on and watch Trump blabber on CNN instead. But if you’re a true fan of Adichie’s style of fiction that nails the minutiae of the mise-en-scene, then enjoy.

Here’s an excerpt, and if you’re feelin’ it, then read the rest here :

When she had first told him “you will win,” that balmy day in Florida last year,

drinking Diet Coke in tennis whites, she had meant he would win at what he wanted: the publicity, the ego polish. It would help his TV show, and impress those business associates tickled by fame. But she had never meant he would actually win the Republican primary, nor had she expected the frenzy of media coverage he received. Americans were so emotionally young, so fascinated by what Europeans knew to be world-weary realities. They were drawn to Donald’s brashness and bluster and bullying, his harsh words, even the amoral ease with which untruths slid out of his mouth. She viewed these with a shrug — he was human, and he had his good points, and did Americans truly not know that human beings told lies? But they had followed him from the beginning, breathlessly and childishly. There were days when every television channel she switched to had his image on the screen. They did not understand that what he found unbearable was to be ignored, and for this she was grateful, because being in the news brought Donald the closest he could be to contentment. He would never be a truly content person, she knew this, because of that primal restlessness that thrummed in him, the compulsion to prove something to himself that he feared he never would. It moved her, made her feel protective. Even the way he nursed his grudges, almost lovingly, unleashing in great detail slights from 20 years ago, made her protective of him. She often felt, despite the age gap of more than two decades, that she was older than Donald. Her response to his

agitations was a curated series of soothing murmurs. Be a little calmer, she told him often. In bed, she had learned to gauge Donald and know when he expected her to gasp. On nights when she did not have the mental energy to act, she would tell Donald, “It is not a good night today,” and he would kiss her cheek and leave, because he liked her air of delicate mystery.

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