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Forbidden Fruit
Forbidden Fruit | Stanley Gazemba
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
Fiction. African and African American Studies. Winner of the Jomo Kenyatta Prize for Literature. Desperate to make ends meet, Ombima commits a "harmless" crime. When he tries to conceal his misdeed, the simple farm laborer becomes a reluctant participant in a sinister affair. If discovered, the consequences could be disastrous for Ombima's family, friends, and a spate of unwitting, gossipy villagers. A delicious tale of greed, lust, and betrayal, Stanley Gazemba's FORBIDDEN FRUIT is more than a dramatic tale of rural life in western Kenya. The moral slips and desperate cover-ups--sometimes sad, sometimes farcical--are the stories of time and place beyond the village of Maragoli. "Once in a while I come across a novel that affirms life, without cheapening it, or sensationalizing, a book that presents a human condition with such mastery it makes one proud to be alive.they are, for me, the sort of books that make literature great."--Binyavanga Wainaina "What makes [FORBIDDEN FRUIT] so special is that it has no pretensions about attempting to address issues of modernity, of city life, of 'clash of cultures, ' of the rural-urban divide...the issues it deals with are as immediate, even if they are beyond the gaze, beyond the limits of the urbanity that attracts most writers."--African Review of Books
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review
Babs_book_obsession
Forbidden Fruit | Stanley Gazemba
Mehso-so

I enjoyed this book, particularly the interesting lives of different people in rural Kenya. The setting is very strong and interesting but I think the main characters could have used a bit more work. I didn't quite get a detailed feel for them or their motivations. Still, a good read overall and I would not be surprised to see Mr. Gazemba's work receive more positive attention.