Adjei-Brenyah was born in Queens, New York City, but grew up in Spring Valley, New York. Both of his parents are from Ghana.[5] His father was a defense attorney and his mother was a kindergarten teacher.[1] Adjei-Brenyah started writing from a young age and wrote for his high school's literature magazine.[2]
Adjei-Brenyah went to the University at Albany, SUNY, for his undergraduate degree, where he learned from Lynne Tillman.[2][5] He attended the graduate writing program at Syracuse University with the goal to study with George Saunders in the creative writing program. Saunders later became his thesis adviser and mentor.[1] Adjei-Brenyah went on to teach in the same program.[5]
After college, Adjei-Brenyah became interested in prison abolition and worked at the Rockland Coalition to End the New Jim Crow.[2]
Adjei-Brenyah's published works are set in near-future dystopias. They often explore the topics of exploitation, capitalism, and the societal acceptance of violence.[1] His non-fiction writing includes a foreword to How a Game Lives, a collection of critical essays by Jacob Geller.[6][7]
Adjei-Brenyah's debut book is a collection of 12 satirical short stories exploring many topics, including racism in modern-day America, consumerism, school shootings, and generational violence.[5]Vulture described the book as "an irreverent, genre-bending approach to ripped-from-the-headlines subject matter".[2]
Adjei-Brenyah's first novel is set in a dystopian America where imprisoned people have the choice to leave prison by joining a gladiatorial system called the "CAPE" or Criminal Action Penal Entertainment program where they take part in televised duels to the death as part of alliances called Chain Gangs. If they manage to survive three years of battles, then they are freed.[8][9] The book has a large cast and is written from the perspective of multiple people participating in the program, as well as activists fighting against it, fans, and the people running it.[8]
Chain-Gang All-Stars started as a short story for inclusion in Friday Black but became too long.[2] Adjei-Brenyah has said that he developed it into a novel because he felt he needed to spend more time exploring the main character, Loretta Thurwar.[9]
^The New York Times Books Staff (November 28, 2023). "The 10 Best Books of 2023". The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 28, 2023. Retrieved November 28, 2023.