Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Arrow of God | Chinua Achebe

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Review


Ezeulu, headstrong chief priest of the god Ulu, is worshipped by the six villages of Umuaro. But he is beginning to find his authority increasingly under threat - from his rivals in the tribe, from those in the white government and even from his own family. Yet he still feels he must be untouchable - surely he is an arrow in the bow of his God? Armed with this belief, he is prepared to lead his people, even if it means destruction and annihilation. Yet the people will not be so easily dominated.

Spare and powerful, Arrow of God is an unforgettable portrayal of the loss of faith, and the struggle between tradition and change. Continuing the epic saga of the community in Things Fall Apart, it is the second volume of Achebe's African trilogy, and is followed by No Longer at Ease.

About the Author


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Chinua Achebe was born in Nigeria in 1930. He was raised in the large village of Ogidi, one of the first centers of Anglican missionary work in Eastern Nigeria, and is a graduate of University College, Ibadan. His early career in radio ended abruptly in 1966, when he left his post as Director of External Broadcasting in Nigeria during the national upheaval that led to the Biafran War. Achebe joined the Biafran Ministry of Information and represented Biafra on various diplomatic and fund-raising missions. He was appointed Senior Research Fellow at the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, and began lecturing widely abroad. For over fifteen years, he was the Charles P. Stevenson Professor of Languages and Literature at Bard College. He is now the David and Marianna Fisher University Professor and professor of Africana studies at Brown University. Chinua Achebe has written over twenty books - novels, short stories, essays and collections of poetry - and has received numerous honours from around the world, including the Honourary Fellowship of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, as well as honourary doctorates from more than thirty colleges and universities. He is also the recipient of Nigeria's highest award for intellectual achievement, the Nigerian National Merit Award. In 2007, he won the Man Booker International Prize for Fiction.



  • Book Details:
  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Classics (28 Jan 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0141191562
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141191560
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.8 x 2.2 cm

Half of a Yellow Sun | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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Review

`The first great African novel of the new century' Alison Lurie
--Guardian Books of the Decade, 2007

Independent

'This magnificent novel is a gripping portrayal of the horrors of
war...A major new African voice.'

The Times

'a powerfully convincing account of one of the bloodier episodes
of post-colonial history.'

Daily Mail

'...funny, heartbreaking, exquisitely written and, without doubt, a literary masterpiece and a classic.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Independent

'A magnificent novel.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Guardian

'Adichie is part of a new generation revisiting the history that her parents survived...' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

The Works Magazine

'Full of drama and characters you care about, this is an educational and enlightening read.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

The Times

'Adichie uses language with relish. Adichie's English is infused with rich poetry.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Telegraph

'What a travesty that Half of a Yellow Sun is not in contention for the Booker prize this year.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Sunday Times

'The novel sustains the interest with its engaging characters and its mostly artful simplicity of style.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

Winner of the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction 2007, this is a heartbreaking, exquisitely written literary masterpiece. This highly anticipated novel from Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is set in Nigeria during the 1960s, at the time of a vicious civil war in which a million people died and thousands were massacred in cold blood. The three main characters in the novel are swept up in the violence during these turbulent years. One is a young boy from a poor village who is employed at a university lecturer's house. The other is a young middle-class woman, Olanna, who has to confront the reality of the massacre of her relatives. And the third is a white man, a writer who lives in Nigeria for no clear reason, and who falls in love with Olanna's twin sister, a remote and enigmatic character. As these people's lives intersect, they have to question their own responses to the unfolding political events. This extraordinary novel is about Africa in a wider sense: about moral responsibility, about the end of colonialism, about ethnic allegiances, about class and race; and about the ways in which love can complicate all of these things.

From the Publisher

The Stories of Africa: a Q & A with Chimamanda Ngozi Adichi
Q: What led you to write a book about the Nigeria-Biafra war?
I wrote this novel because I wanted to write about love and war, because I
grew up in the shadow of Biafra, because I lost both grandfathers in the
Nigeria-Biafra war, because I wanted to engage with my history in order to
make sense of my present, because many of the issues that led to the war
remain unresolved in Nigeria today, because my father has tears in his eyes
when he speaks of losing his father, because my mother still cannot speak
at length about losing her father in a refugee camp, because the brutal
bequests of colonialism make me angry, because the thought of the egos and
indifference of men leading to the unnecessary deaths of men and women and
children enrages me, because I don't ever want to forget. I have always
known that I would write a novel about Biafra. At 16, I wrote an awfully
melodramatic play called For Love of Biafra. Years later, I wrote short
stories, That Harmattan Morning, Half of a Yellow Sun and Ghosts, all
dealing with the war. I felt that I had to approach the subject with little
steps, paint on a smaller canvas first, before starting the novel.
Q: Given that at the time of the war you hadn't yet been born, what sort of
research did you do to prepare for writing this book?
I read books. I looked at photos. I talked to people. In the four years
that it took to finish the book, I would often ask older people I met,
`Where were you in 1967?' and then take it from there. It was from stories
of that sort that I found out tiny details that are important for fiction.
My parents' stories formed the backbone of my research. Still, I have a lot
of research notes that I did not end up using because I did not want to be
stifled by fact, did not want the political events to overwhelm the human
story.
Q: Are memories of the Nigeria-Biafra war still alive in Nigeria, talked
about on a regular basis, or do you feel that the conflict is being lost to
history as time passes and that it becomes less important to Igbo culture?
The war is still talked about, still a potent political issue. But I find
that it is mostly talked about in uninformed and unimaginative ways. People
repeat the same things they have been told without having a full grasp of
the complex nature of the war or they hold militant positions lacking in
nuance. It also remains, to my surprise, very ethnically divisive: the
(brave enough) Igbo talk about it and the non-Igbo think the Igbo should
get over it. There is a new movement called MASSOB, the Movement for the
Actualization of the Sovereign State of Biafra, which in the past few years
has captured the imagination of many Igbo people. MASSOB is controversial;
it is reported to engage in violence and its leaders are routinely arrested
and harassed by the government. Still, despite its inchoate objectives,
MASSOB's grassroots support continues to grow. I think this is because it
gives a voice to many issues that have been officially swept aside by the
country but which continue to resonate for many Igbo people.
Q: The book focuses on the experiences of a small set of people who are
experiencing the conflict from very different points of view. When we step
into their individual worlds, we don't know their every thought - the
narrator who follows them isn't omniscient - but rather we seem to see and
understand them through a film. Can you describe your narrative style and
why you framed these characters the way you did?
I actually don't think of them as being seen through a `film'. I have
always been suspicious of the omniscient narrative. It has never appealed
to me, always seemed a little lazy and a little too easy. In an
introduction to the brilliant Italian writer Giovanni Verga's novel, it is
said about his treatment of his characters that he `never lets them analyze
their impulses but simply lets them be driven by them'. I wanted to write
characters who are driven by impulses that they may not always be
consciously aware of, which I think is true for us human beings. Besides, I
didn't want to bore my reader - and myself - to death, exploring the
characters' every thought.
Q: The character Richard is a British white expatriate who considers
himself Biafran, drawing a certain amount of quiet- and some loud-
criticism for his self-proclaimed identity. Another key narrator, Ugwu, is
a 13-year-old houseboy who reacts rather than acts. Both are interesting
choices for characters for the narrator to `shadow'. Why did you pick
them?
Ugwu was inspired in part by Mellitus, who was my parents' houseboy during
the war; in part by Fide, who was our houseboy when I was growing up. And I
have always been interested in the less obvious narrators. When my mom
spoke about Mellitus, what a blessing he was, how much he helped her, how
she did not know what she would have done without him, I remember being
moved but also thinking that he could not possibly have been the saint my
mother painted, that he must have been flawed and human. I think that Ugwu
does come to act more and react less as we watch him come into his own.
Richard was a more difficult choice. I very much wanted somebody to be the
Biafran `outsider' because I think that outsiders played a major role in
the war but I wanted him, also, to be human and real - and needy!

From the Author

In the Shadow of Biafra
by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

I taught an introductory creative writing class at Princeton last year and,
in addition to the classic `show don't tell', I often told my students that
their fiction needed to have `emotional truth'. I am not sure whether they
knew exactly what `emotional truth' meant. Sometimes I was not sure that I
did either, or perhaps it was simply that I could never fully define it. I
could, however, recognize it whenever I saw it: a quality different from
honesty and more resilient than fact, a quality that existed not in the
kind of fiction that explains but in the kind of fiction that shows. All
the novels I love, the ones I remember, the ones I re-read, have this
empathetic human quality. And because I write the kind of fiction I like to
read, when I started Half of a Yellow Sun, set before and during the
Nigeria-Biafra war of 1967-1970, I hoped that emotional truth would be its
major recognizable trait.
I hoped, too, that it would be the kind of character-driven war novel brave
enough to engage subtly with politics, as the Zimbabwean writer Shimmer
Chinodya does in his remarkable Harvest of Thorns. What struck me most
about Harvest of Thorns was that I emerged from it with a complex portrait
of Zimbabwe's war of independence from - at last - the point of view of
black Zimbabweans without ever feeling as if I had been lectured. The
wonderfully restrained sense of deep disappointment underlying Chinodya's
narrative reminded me of how similar the histories of many African
countries are, how passionately people believed in ideas that would
eventually disappoint them, in people that would betray them, in futures
that would elude them. The Biafra stories in Chinua Achebe's Girls at War
and Other Stories are also about what happens when the shiny things we once
believed in begin to rust before our eyes. Achebe's trademark compassionate
irony - he respects his characters but at the same time is amused by them
and expects the reader to be also - is not very obvious in Sugar Baby,
which is the best piece of fiction I have read about Biafra. It starts with
the narrator watching his friend Cletus fling a handful of sugar out of the
window. A symbolic act: Cletus is an unqualified sweet tooth (something he
must have developed as a student living in Ladbroke Grove) and the
unbearable sugar scarcity in Biafra led to humiliations, one involving the
loss of his girlfriend, another the rage of an Irish priest. Now that the
war is over, Cletus and his friends are eager to tell self-flagellating
stories of hardship, they `had become in those days like a bunch of old
hypochondriac women vying to recount the most lurid details of their own
special infirmities.' The narrator is reluctant to join in. For him, there
is something still too painful, too sacred, about their recent history; he
is not yet ready to laugh at the once-shiny rusted things.
Girls at War portrays a world inhabited by people who feel their
metaphysical losses more strongly than their material ones. Their
disillusion, their manic self-mockery, their fixation on survival, are all
corollaries of their deep faith in their cause. Achebe's war fiction then,
humane and pragmatic as it is, becomes an oblique paean to the
possibilities that Biafra held. The stories have an emotional power that
accumulate in an unobtrusive way and stun the reader at the end; there are
sentences in them that will always move me to tears.
Successful fiction does not need to be validated by `real life'; I cringe
whenever a writer is asked how much of a novel is `real'. Yet, I find
myself thinking differently about these two war novels I admire. I have
often wondered how much of the character Benjamin in Harvest of Thorns
mirrors Shimmer Chinodya, how much of the muted defeat in Girls at War is
in fact what Chinua Achebe himself felt about the loss of Biafra. Perhaps
it is because to write realistic fiction about a war, especially one
central to the history of one's country, is to be constantly aware of a
responsibility to something larger than art. While writing Half of a Yellow
Sun, I enjoyed playing with minor things: inventing a train station in a
town that has none, placing towns closer to each other than they are,
changing the chronology of conquered towns. Yet I did not play with the
central events of that time. I could not let a character be changed by
anything that had not actually happened. If fiction is indeed the soul of
history, then I was equally committed to the fiction and the history,
equally keen to be true to the spirit of the time as well as to my artistic
vision of it.
The writing itself was a bruising experience. I struggled to maintain many
fragile balances. I cried often, was frequently crippled with doubt and
anxiety, often wondered whether to stop or to scale back. But there were
also moments of extravagant joy when I recognized, in a character or moment
or scene, that quality of emotional truth. 

About the Author

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was born in Nigeria in 1977. She is from Abba, in Anambra State, but grew up in the university town of Nsukka, where she attended primary and secondary schools. She went on to receive a BS in Communication and Political Science from Eastern Connecticut State University and an MA from Johns Hopkins University, both in the United States. Her short fiction has been published in literary journals including Granta, and won the International PEN/David Wong award in 2003. 'Purple Hibiscus', her first novel, was shortlisted for the Orange Prize and the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and was winner of the Hurston/Wright Legacy award for debut fiction. She was a Hodder fellow at Princeton University for the 2005-2006 academic year. She lives in Nigeria.

Purple Hibiscus | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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Review

'A beautiful and often harrowing story.' Observer Books of the Year 'A sensitive and touching story of a child exposed too early to religious intolerance and the uglier side of the Nigerian state.' J. M. Coetzee 'Political brutality and domestic violence, religion and witchcraft all merge with subtle force in this memorable novel. Chimammanda Ngozi Adichie uses childhood innocence to write Nigerian history with the eye of a family insider.' Hugo Hamilton 'Purple Hibiscus is the best debut I've read since Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things.' Jason Cowley, Times journalist, literary editor of the New Statesman 'This debut ensnares the reader from the first page and lingers in the memory!in soft, searing voice, Adichie examines the complexities of family, faith and country through the haunted but hopeful eyes of a young girl on the cusp of womanhood.' Publishers Weekly

Guardian

`Adjoa Andoh's characterisation of the narrator, whose confused love/hate relationship with her father underpins the story, is stunning.' --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

The Times

'It's a mature coming-of-age story, and an engrossing portrait of Nigerian society.' --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Sunday Times

`Adjoa Andoh's ear for the characterful eccentricities of Nigerian speech gives the beautifully described contemporary African world a lively pulse' 

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Description

Longlisted for the 2004 Man Booker Prize Shortlisted for the 2004 Orange Prize A haunting tale of an Africa and an adolescence undergoing tremendous changes by a talented young Nigerian writer. The limits of fifteen-year-old Kambili's world are defined by the high walls of her family estate and the dictates of her repressive and fanatically religious father. Her life is regulated by schedules: prayer, sleep, study, and more prayer. When Nigeria begins to fall apart during a military coup, Kambili's father, involved mysteriously in the political crisis, sends Kambili and her brother away to live with their aunt. In this house, full of energy and laughter, she discovers life and love -- and a terrible, bruising secret deep within her family. Centring on the promise of freedom and the pain and exhilaration of adolescence, Purple Hibiscus is the extraordinary debut of a remarkable new talent.

About the Author

Image of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Author | Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie was born in Nigeria in 1977. Her first novel 'Purple Hibiscus' was published in 2003 and was longlisted for the Booker Prize. Her second novel 'Half of a Yellow Sun' won the 2007 Orange Prize for Fiction. Her work has been selected by the Commonwealth Broadcasting Association and the BBC Short Story Awards and has appeared in various literary publications, including Zoetrope and The Iowa Review.



  • Book Details
  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Perennial; New Ed edition (7 Feb 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007189885
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007189885
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.8 x 2.4 cm

Delta Nigeria - The Rape of Paradise | George Osodi

Delta Nigeria: The Rape of Paradise



For more than five centuries the fortunes of the Niger Delta have been closely tied to that of the global economy. For its slave ports, then palm oil industry, and most recently, through the discovery of crude oil in the 1950s. Oil multinationals soon came to the fore, working in alliance with a local elite to strip the region of its wealth and despoil it. At the receiving end are the region's impoverished inhabitants: left with a poisoned environment, faced with a government that never cares and victims of rival armed militant groups laying claim to territories. George Osodi is an internationally acclaimed Nigerian photographer, who has spent over six years documenting his country, hoping to bring attention to not only the rest of the world, but the people of Nigeria, what is happening. A country still so rich in natural resources and beauty, but where many of its people have been left with nothing.


About the Photographer


George Osodi at galerie-herrmann.com in Germany


George Osodi is a Nigerian photographer from Lagos. His photographs range between photojournalism and artistic documentary, closely observing social, economic and ecological processes of exploitation. He was chosen to be part of the prestigious Documenta art fair in 2007.


Book Details:

  • Hardcover: 248 pages
  • Publisher: Trolley; illustrated edition edition (31 Oct 2011)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1904563856
  • ISBN-13: 978-1904563853
  • Product Dimensions: 26 x 20 x 2.8 cm

Here is a Youtube slideshow of George Osodi's work:





Sunday, 27 November 2011

The Granta Book of the African Short Story by Helon Habila



Review

A timely anthology of short stories [that] reveals the strength of contemporary African fiction. Ruth FranklinProspect (01/09/11)
Granta’s continuing energy and brio make it shine among publishers. Many of the writers deserve an audience beyond their national boundaries; Granta has manoeuvred itself into a unique position where it is the only publisher which not only can do this, but do it fantastically well. Helon Habila has made a good fist of an almost impossible task. The overall feel of this collection is big, brave and intricately interwoven … There is a clutch of terrific stories here for almost every kind of reader. Chris DolanHerald (03/09/11)
The majority of authors in the collection are lively and innovative and paint a good picture of emerging African talent … Granta’s new collection shows a generation of engaging and talented writers coming out of Africa. Habila suggests that with the spread of the internet across the continent in the past fifteen years, short fiction has found a new outlet for publication and will continue to gain exposure across the globe where previously it would never have done. Things can only get better, Habila hints, although to be honest they were pretty good to start with. Tom LittleThink Africa Press (06/09/11)
The skill and sophistication of African authors is on display throughout this rich and rewarding book.
Joan SmithThe Times (10/09/11)
Brings together some of the most exciting voices from this generation of Afropolitans. Ellah Allfrey, Daily Telegraph Review (10/09/11)
A sense of often painful transition echoes through these  snapshots; as does a defiance in the face of all that can be thrown at these modern Africans.  Siobhan MurphyMetroBook of the Week (15/09/11)

Product Description

The Granta Book of the African Short Story introduces a group of African writers described by its editor, Helon Habila, as ‘the post-nationalist generation’. Presenting a diverse and dazzling collection from all over the continent - from Morocco to Zimbabwe, Uganda to Kenya - Habila has focused on younger, newer writers, interspersed with some of their older, more established peers, to give a fascinating picture of a new and more liberated Africa.Disdaining the narrowly nationalist and political preoccupations of previous generations, these writers are characterized by their engagement with the wider world and the opportunities offered by the internet, the end of apartheid, the end of civil wars and dictatorships, and the possibilities of free movement around the world. Many of them live outside Africa. Their work is inspired by travel and exile. They are liberated, global and expansive. As Dambudzo Marechera wrote: "If you write for a particular nation, or tribe, then f*** you." These are the stories of a new Africa, punchy, self-confident and defiant.Includes stories by: Rachida El Charni; Henrietta Rose-Innes; George Makana Clarke; Ivan Vladislavik; Mansoura Ez Eldin; Fatou Diome; Aminatta Forna; Manuel Rui; Patrice Nganang; Leila Aboulela; Zoe Wicombe; Ala Al-Aswany; Doreen Baingana; EC Osonduq

Book Description

The Granta Book of the African Short Story introduces a group of African writers described by its editor, Helon Habila, as 'the post-nationalist generation'. Presenting a diverse and dazzling collection from all over the continent - from Morocco to Zimbabwe, Uganda to Kenya - Habila has focused on younger, newer writers, contrasted with some of their older, more established peers, to give a fascinating picture of a new and more liberated Africa.
Disdaining the narrowly nationalist and political preoccupations of previous generations, these writers are characterized by their engagement with the wider world and the opportunities offered by the internet, the end of apartheid, the end of civil wars and dictatorships, and the possibilities of free movement around the world. Many of them live outside Africa. Their work is inspired by travel and exile. They are liberated, global and expansive. As Dambudzo Marechera wrote: 'If you're a writer for a specific nation or specific race, then f*** you." These are the stories of a new Africa, punchy, self-confident and defiant.
Includes stories by:
Rachida el-Charni; Henrietta Rose-Innes; George Makana Clark; Ivan Vladislavic; Mansoura Ez-Eldin; Fatou Diome; Aminatta Forna; Manuel Rui; Patrice Nganang; Leila Aboulela; Zoe Wicomb; Alaa Al Aswany; Doreen Baingana; E.C. Osondu

About the Author


Helon Habila was born in Nigeria. He has published three novels, Waiting for an Angel (2002), Measuring Time (2007) and Oil on Water (2010). Winner of the Caine Prize 2001, and the Commonwealth Writer's Prize 2003, Habila currently teaches Creative Writing at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, where he lives with his family.

Harare North by Brian Chikwava





In an astonishing, revelatory original debut, Caine Prize for African Writing winner Brian Chikwava tackles head-on the realities of life as a refugee....
When he lands in Harare North, our unnamed protagonist carries nothing but a cardboard suitcase full of memories and an email address for his childhood friend, Shingi. Finessing his way through immigration, he spends a few restless weeks as the very unwelcome guest in his cousin's home before tracking down Shingi in a squat. This shocking, powerful first novel is the story of a stranger in a strange land—one of the thousands of illegal Zimbabwean immigrants seeking a better life—with a past he is determined to hide. From the first line the language fizzes with energy, humor, and not a little menace. As he struggles to make his life in London (the "Harare North" of the title) and battles with the weight of what he has left behind in a strife-torn Zimbabwe, every expectation and preconception is turned on its head. The inhabitants of the squat function at various levels of desperation: Shingi struggles to find meaningful work and to meet the demands of his family back home; Tsitsi makes a living renting out her baby to women defrauding Social Services; Alex claims to have an important job in Croydon. Fearlessly political, laugh-out-loud funny, and with an anti-hero whose voice is impossible to forget, this novel is an arresting account of London as it is experienced by Africa's dispossessed.

The unnamed narrator of Chikwava’s alternately funny and appalling novel is an émigré who arrives in London with little more than a cardboard suitcase. He’s on the run from trouble back in his native country of Zimbabwe, where he ran into difficulties as a member of President Robert Mugabe’s Green Bombers youth militia, who meted out violent punishment to those perceived to be enemies of the state. He finds his old schoolmate Shingi living in a squalid flat in Brixton along with other hapless émigrés, including Tsitsi, who makes a living renting her baby to women out to scam social services. Worry about being taken advantage of by unscrupulous employers and of being deported by immigration services alternates with the desperation of running out of food and money. And yet, the book is often darkly comic as the narrator, employing a vivid vernacular style, struggles to parse the strange ways of Londoners. This striking debut novel offers a wholly distinctive voice and an up-close view of the plight of illegal immigrants. --Joanne Wilkinson

Review

"The darkest of comedies, fueled by an electric, wholly convincing voice."  —Observer

"An hilarious and wrenching examination of immigrant life . . . from a prodigiously talented and uncompromising writer."  —Ali Smith, author, The Accidental

"Chikwava has created an utterly compelling anti-hero . . . mesmerizing."  —Guardian

"A perfectly original and true narrative voice . . . Full of surprises, delicious little tics, and real fire-in-the-belly creativity . . . but importantly, the voice comes off as effortless, and therefore true . . . it’s a major accomplishment."  —Tod Wodicka, author, All Shall Be Well

About the Author


Brian Chikwava is among the exciting new generation of writers emerging from the African continent. His short story "Seventh Street Alchemy" was awarded the 2004 Caine Prize for African Writing.

One day I will write about this place: A Memoir by Binyavanga Wainaina



Book Description:

A groundbreaking and wide-angled memoir by the acclaimed Kenyan Caine Prize winner Binyavanga Wainaina
Binyavanga Wainaina tumbled through his middle-class Kenyan childhood out of kilter with the world around him. This world came to him as a chaos of loud and colorful sounds: the hair dryers at his mother’s beauty parlor, black mamba bicycle bells, mechanics in Nairobi, the music of Michael Jackson—all punctuated by the infectious laughter of his brother and sister, Jimmy and Ciru. He could fall in with their patterns, but it would take him a while to carve out his own.

In this vivid and compelling debut memoir, Wainaina takes us through his school days, his mother’s religious period, his failed attempt to study in South Africa as a computer programmer, a moving family reunion in Uganda, and his travels around Kenya. The landscape in front of him always claims his main attention, but he also evokes the shifting political scene that unsettles his views on family, tribe, and nationhood.

Throughout, reading is his refuge and his solace. And when, in 2002, a writing prize comes through, the door is opened for him to pursue the career that perhaps had been beckoning all along. A series of fascinating international reporting assignments follow. Finally he circles back to a Kenya in the throes of postelection violence and finds he is not the only one questioning the old certainties.

Resolutely avoiding stereotype and cliché, Wainaina paints every scene in One Day I Will Write About This Place with a highly distinctive and hugely memorable brush.

About the Author:

Binyavanga Wainaina is the founding editor of Kwani?, a leading African literary magazine based in Kenya. He won the 2002 Caine Prize for African Writing, and has written for Vanity FairVirginia QuarterlyGranta, and The New York Times. Wainaina directs the Chinua Achebe Center for African Writers and Artists at Bard College.