If you have met Adiba Nelson you know she can be painfully, often hilariously, self-aware.
βIβm a fat Black woman with a gap in her teeth and nappy hair,β she said. βI ainβt no cover girl.β
Yet there she is, on the cover of a book, wearing a green dress and trying hard not to look down at the authorβs name: Adiba Nelson.

Her book, βAinβt That a Mother,β was re-released as a paperback this summer. It might be the most refreshingly frank memoir ever written, told with heart, humor and honesty β¦ and in the same voice as the woman who lived it.
She definitely puts herself out there. Among other things, she reviews two failed marriages, a surprise pregnancy, post-partum depression, her short career with a local burlesque troupe, and learning her daughter had cerebral palsy.
The heading for Chapter 11: βSh** Nobody Talks About.β
More than anything, Nelsonβs memoir is real, and real people have noticed.
She was a presenting author at the Tucson Festival of Books in March.
Next week, she will begin a two-month term as the Writer in Residence at Pima County Public Library, the first Black author ever selected.
βAinβt That a Motherβ will become a TV series after the screenwriter and screen actors strike is over.
βI was so happy I bought a pink velvet couch to celebrate,β Nelson said.
Many Tucsonans knew Nelson as an inspirational speaker before reading her memoir. She did a TEDx talk called βSkating Downhillβ in 2017. A documentary about her, entitled βFull Nelson,β won an Emmy for Arizona Illustrated in 2018. Before the pandemic, she spoke at a number of local events, often about inclusion.
But the springboard had been the childrenβs book Nelson wrote for her daughter, Emory. It was entitled βMeet ClaraBelle Blue,β and featured a young Black girl making the most of life from her wheelchair.
βWhen I started reading books to Emory, I wanted to find books about kids like her,β Nelson explained. βWe went to Barnes & Noble one day and asked if they had some books about disabled children. This was 2011, and they said no. Well, how βbout Black girls? Again, no.
βWell, I got angry. I went home and wrote my daughter a story in about 10 minutes. It was just a rinky-dink story about a little Black girl in a pink dress and a wheelchair, but to her it was a book.β
It was a cousin who encouraged Nelson to make it a real, honest-to-goodness book. She did, but publishers said it was too niche.
βThey said the world wasnβt ready, but I thought, βYou know what? Weβre here now. We donβt have time to wait for the world to be ready for my kid.ββ
In 2013, Nelson self-published βMeet ClaraBelle Blue.β The book no publisher wanted is now available in the U.S., Europe, South America and Australia, both in English and Spanish.
Nelsonβs luck was no better the next time she approached the major publishers, but several said they would be interested in a memoir.
βMy agent, Jess Regel, asked if this was something Iβd be interested in doing. I was like, well, the universe is saying I have to.β
The universe appears to have been right.
βWhat was wild was that we got a TV deal before we got a book deal,β Nelson said. βMy agent has bigger dreams for me than I do, and she pitched the proposed plotline for my book to some TV producers, too. I had an adaptation contract for the book before I actually wrote the book.β
Born in New York City, Nelson moved to Tucson at age 11. The transition did not go smoothly β βI spent middle school grounded,β she recalls β but it did make her a bookworm.
βMy momβs punishment when I got in trouble was to take away everything I loved to do. She did let me read books, though. I got in a lot of trouble. I read a lot of books.β
While at Doolen Middle School, Nelson discovered a love of writing, too. She was the gossip columnist for the school newspaper.
There was a brief flirtation with a possible writing career while at Mesa Community College in Phoenix, but she didnβt really get serious until the birth of her daughter.
βWriting kind of got me through my postpartum time,β she said. βI started a blog for moms called βSpit-Up is Sexy.β I was trying to cope with my problems with humor. I didnβt know it, but one of my followers was Denene Millner, the author. She reached out to me one day and I about lost my mind. That gave me the chutzpah to think maybe my writingβs not so bad.β
No, itβs not.
Nelson is now a professional author, with two novels under way and contracts to produce two childrenβs books for Macmillan in 2024 and 2026.
For the time being, though, she is enjoying life as the author of βAinβt That a Mother.β
βItβs not a bestseller, but it has found its way to a lot of people who need it,β Nelson said. βIβve gotten messages from people who say Iβve told their story, that now they feel seen. Thereβs this beautiful thing β when you allow yourself to be vulnerable, you tap into other peopleβs humanity. People who need you find you. People who need this book now have it.β
The libraryβs Writer in Residence program enlists local authors to help new writers complete and publish their work. Nelson will be available for individual sessions through Nov. 18. Open-to-all workshops will begin Sept. 29 at Woods Memorial Library, 3455 N. First Ave. To schedule a visit with Nelson or learn more about her workshops, click here.