Great African Reads discussion
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What are you reading? Or planning to read?
I'm taking part in Dewey's 24 hour Readathon today (even if I don't intend to read for 24 hours) I am hoping to make some kind of dent in my African reading pile - which (just the library books) contains:
There Is a Country: New Fiction from the New Nation of South Sudan
The Joys of Motherhood by Buchi Emecheta
The Promised Land by Grace Ogot
Ripples in the Pool by Rebeka Njau
David's Story by Zoë Wicomb
The Madonna of Excelsior by Zakes Mda
Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire
L'Insoumise de la Porte de Flandre by Fouad Laroui (in a Danish translation)
I forgot: Xala by Ousmane Sembène (it was in a different pile)
There Is a Country: New Fiction from the New Nation of South Sudan
The Joys of Motherhood by Buchi Emecheta
The Promised Land by Grace Ogot
Ripples in the Pool by Rebeka Njau
David's Story by Zoë Wicomb
The Madonna of Excelsior by Zakes Mda
Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire
L'Insoumise de la Porte de Flandre by Fouad Laroui (in a Danish translation)
I forgot: Xala by Ousmane Sembène (it was in a different pile)
Great pile Anetq, though probably too many for 24h :)
Hadn't heard of the last one by Fouad Laroui, added it to my tbr list.
Enjoy!
Hadn't heard of the last one by Fouad Laroui, added it to my tbr list.
Enjoy!
Ha, no no illusions there :)
I started with the slim volumes, so I finished There Is a Country: New Fiction from the New Nation of South Sudan...
And:
Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire (slim volume of poetry - but great.
L'Insoumise de la Porte de Flandre by Fouad Laroui
I started with the slim volumes, so I finished There Is a Country: New Fiction from the New Nation of South Sudan...
And:
Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire (slim volume of poetry - but great.
L'Insoumise de la Porte de Flandre by Fouad Laroui
I am reading Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa by Jason Stearns. A very insightful and readable book on the violent recent history of (a part of) Central Africa.
Wim wrote: "I am reading Dancing in the Glory of Monsters: The Collapse of the Congo and the Great War of Africa by Jason Stearns. A very insightful and readable book on the vi..."
Interesting! I did a bit of Congo(s) reading - all rather depressing about the Belgian rule and atrocities, but Tram 83 suggested the outlook is still bleak. It sounds good - even it it does also sound rather depressing?
Interesting! I did a bit of Congo(s) reading - all rather depressing about the Belgian rule and atrocities, but Tram 83 suggested the outlook is still bleak. It sounds good - even it it does also sound rather depressing?

Sanne wrote: "I've just finished reading A Girl Called Eel by Ali Zamir, a Comorian author. It has an interesting writing style and it really made me think. Has one else read it..."
No, but now I want to :) Sounds interesting, and a haven't read anything Comorian yet.
No, but now I want to :) Sounds interesting, and a haven't read anything Comorian yet.


Looking forward to your review of it

Sanne wrote: "I've just finished reading A Girl Called Eel by Ali Zamir, a Comorian author. It has an interesting writing style and it really made me think. Has one else read it..."
I just bought the paperback, hoping to catch up on my African reading as soon as the grading marathon that is my January is over :)
I just bought the paperback, hoping to catch up on my African reading as soon as the grading marathon that is my January is over :)
Cheryl wrote: "Reading The Granta Book of the African Short Story and enjoying the mix of stories from various countries and the different prose styles. I’m already marking authors to explore..."
Sounds good Cheryl! And some great authors in the collection - please say so, if you'd like to lead a joint effort to read short stories again?
Sounds good Cheryl! And some great authors in the collection - please say so, if you'd like to lead a joint effort to read short stories again?

I was able to "borrow" it free from the Kindle lending library due to being an Amazon prime member. Check into that if you're a prime member. It has occasional "typo" errors like it was OCR scanned, but not excessive.
I don't have plans to read any other books by African writers this summer, will wait and see what the group picks. Mostly reading books by N. American, European and Russian writers otherwise. I can always read a couple short stories by African writers from the books I have.

I wonder if you got a chance to read Xala yet? Sembene also made a movie from it; it got good critic reviews. I haven't seen it yet, or read the book, but have seen a couple of his other films, Camp De Thiaroye, and Black Girl, both were quite good.
I read Sembene's God's Bits of Wood and it was excellent.
I wonder if our group should have a discussion thread on African movies (by African filmmakers) ? Or maybe that would be too off-focus.
George P. wrote: "Anetq wrote: "I'm taking part in Dewey's 24 hour Readathon today (even if I don't intend to read for 24 hours) I am hoping to make some kind of dent in my African reading pile - which (just the lib..."
Hi George - Yes I read it as my January book for the TBR-challenge /topic/group... and really liked it. I had had the book on long term loan for-e-ver before reading it, for no good reason?!
Hi George - Yes I read it as my January book for the TBR-challenge /topic/group... and really liked it. I had had the book on long term loan for-e-ver before reading it, for no good reason?!

...
book:TELLING PEOPLE WHAT THEY DON'T WANT TO HEAR: A Liberal Life Under Apartheid|54134319]
Roy Isacowitz

I've just started The GoldDiggers: A Novel which deals with Zimbabwean migrants in Johannesburg. I personally know many from countries like Zimbabwe, Malawi and DRC, so this is a book that I will read within that context.

My goal was to include at least one book by an author from every country, although there were a few I was bot able to find, at least not translated to English.
I recently listened to Teaching My Mother How to Give Birth by Warsan Shire and highly recommend it the audiobook especially! =) I read Palace Walk by Naguib Mahfouz last month, enjoyed it much more than I’d expected, and plan to read the rest of the Cairo Street trilogy this year.

My goal was to include at least one book by an author from every c..."
This is such an interesting list, Erin. Good luck with this challenge.
I often go to this source if I cannot find something in our group -

My goal was to include at least one book by an author from every c..."
I really like this list!
Am I mistaken or does it only feature books by African writers that are really set in Africa, i.e. voluntarily not covering stories that also focus on migration to e.g. the US or the UK?

My goal was to include at least one book by an author..."
Thanks Carolien for reminding me of this list!
The author of this website had her book (The World between two Covers) out when the Olympic Games took place in London. This non-fictional book is also interesting in itself as it deals with different angles of making a book (situation of authors, publishing conditions, readership etc) and what this means in different parts of the world.

Carolien wrote: "I've just finished The Orchard of Lost Souls which is beautiful. Is anybody interested in a challenge to read the Africa39 authors? I've just realised I am reading four of them this..."
Good idea Carolien, this could be a great challenge!
Good idea Carolien, this could be a great challenge!
I started reading L'insurrection inachevée: Burkina Faso 2014, non fiction on Burkina Faso's recent history of popular revolt.

Sounds intriguing! Is there a link available for more information? And is this a challenge for this year or a long-term project?

Here's a summary of the project:
And here's the book that was done by the authors:
Africa39: New Writing from Africa South of the Sahara


My review: /review/show...


‘A remarkable and moving book. Evocative of an era of raw possibility; unflinching as it traces the veins of violence that run through South Africa’s bedrock to this day.� � Henrietta Rose-Innes
You can read an excerpt, William Hull arrives in Port Nolloth, on this page
Bernadette wrote: "Have you checked out Upturned Earth?..."
Bernadette this looks like a promotional entry? If so, we ask that that all promotion and advertisement go in this folder: /topic/group...
Thank you!
Bernadette this looks like a promotional entry? If so, we ask that that all promotion and advertisement go in this folder: /topic/group...
Thank you!


Take a look at the following ...
Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
The Kishi: An Esowon Story by Antoine Bandele
The Blood of Titans by C. Michael Forsyth
The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter
The Truth About Awiti by C.P. Patrick
Griots: Sisters of the Spear by Milton J. Davis
Imaro by Charles R. Saunders
Dossouye by Charles R. Saunders
Griots: A Sword and Soul Anthology by Milton J. Davis
Timbuktu Chronicles: Aida and the Chosen Soldier by Anthony Nana Kwamu
Shades Of Memnon: Book One by Gregory Walker
Thanks
Andrew

My pleasure, Calla. This is just a small selection. You will find others by taking a look at the following Listopia lists:
- Best African Spiritual Books � Fiction and Non-fiction
- Speculative fiction anthologies & collections by writers of color
- Books by Black Authors That Don't Feature Slavery, Colonialism, Racism, or Poverty
- Diversity in Fantasy and Science Fiction
I hope this helps.

I can recommend Véronique Tadjo's Queen Pokou.


Great storytelling with some universal truths to be found.

Hello Carolien, Can you provide the author's name or publisher for Borderline. I have searched the net in vain! Thanks

But quite a bit of it is in Afrikaans.
It is on Amazon on Kindle.
RandomhouseZA is the publisher.

I am still planning to read Chaka by Thomas Mofolo, which I didn't get to, when it was the Sept/Oct read, also adding Lesotho to my read countries... I think 2022 is my year to completed reading something from all the African countries!


I'm looking for book recommendations. I'm interested in South African fiction. Do you know any novels that highlight the issue of racism and that of women/feminism in South Africa, whether apartheid or post-apartheid?
Many thanks

A haunting memoir about Matar's search for the truth concerning his father's fate after his incarceration in Libya's notorious prison during the Ghaddafi regime. His language eloquently describes the trauma experienced by family members of the disappeared. It's very powerful.
My review: /review/show...

I'm looking for book recommendations. I'm interested in South African fiction. Do you know any novels that highlight the issue of racism and that of women/feminism in South Africa..."
Hi Amira, I'm South African so let me see what I can suggest.
A good start may be Coconut or other books by Kopano Matlwa
You can also look at Angela Makholwa. Maybe start with The Blessed Girl.
Another good option is Zukiswa Wanner. Try Men of the South or London Cape Town Joburg.
Also look for anything by Sindiwe Magona. And try Zakes Mda or Fred Khumalo.
For racism you can try the latest Book prize winner - The Promise. Another classic option would be works by Nadine Gordimer.
A good source for ideas is the Johannesburg Review of Books which you can find here:
Carolien wrote: "Amira wrote: "Hello community.
I'm looking for book recommendations. I'm interested in South African fiction. Do you know any novels that highlight the issue of racism and that of women/feminism i..."
Nice suggestion list, thank you Carolien!
I'm looking for book recommendations. I'm interested in South African fiction. Do you know any novels that highlight the issue of racism and that of women/feminism i..."
Nice suggestion list, thank you Carolien!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Woman Next Door (other topics)The Shadow King (other topics)
Death and the King's Horseman (other topics)
The Lion and the Jewel (other topics)
Silence of the Chagos (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Yewande Omotoso (other topics)Maaza Mengiste (other topics)
Wole Soyinka (other topics)
Shenaz Patel (other topics)
Djaimilia Pereira de Almeida (other topics)
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Please share! Hopefully we can inspire each other, maybe find a reading buddy? Feel free to recommend your latest read or discuss what you are reading even if it is not a group read.
Authors! Please note : If you would like to promote your book, please feel free to do so in this folder. Thank you for your understanding!