Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Magic of Saida
The Magic of Saida | M.G. Vassanji
1 post | 1 read | 2 to read
Giller Prizewinner M. G. Vassanji gives us a powerfully emotional novel of love and loss, of an African/Indian man who returns to the town of his birth in search of the girl he once lovedand the sense of self that has always eluded him. Kamal Punja is a physician who has lived in Canada for the past forty years, but whom we first meet in a Tanzanian hospital. He is delirious and says he has been poisoned with hallucinogens. But when Kamal finds a curious and sympathetic ear in a local publisher, his ravings begin to reveal a tale of extraordinary pathos, complexity, and mystery. Raised by his African mother, deserted when he was four by his Indian father, married to a woman of Indian heritage, and the father of two wholly Westernized children, Kamal had reached a stage of both undreamed-of material success and disintegrating personal ties. Then, suddenly, he stepped off the treadmill, allowed an old regret to awaken, and set off to find the girl he had known as a child, to finally keep his promise to her that he would return. The girl was Saida, granddaughter of a great, beloved Swahili poet. Kamal and Saida were constant companionshe teaching her English and arithmetic, she teaching him Arabic script and Swahili poetryand in his childs mind, she was his future wife. Until, when he was eleven, his mother sent him to the capital, Dar es Salaam, to live with his fathers relatives, to become an Indian and thus secure his future. Now Kamal is journeying back to the village he left, into the maze of his long-unresolved mixed-race identity and the nightmarish legacy of his broken promise to Saida. At once dramatic, searching, and intelligent, The Magic of Saida moves deftly between the past and present, painting both an intimate picture of passion and betrayal and a broad canvas of political promise and failure in contemporary Africa. It is a timeless storyand a story very much of our own time.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Butterfinger
The Magic of Saida | M.G. Vassanji
post image
Mehso-so

Set in Tanzania, a rich blend of east African spiritualist magic, Hindu folklore (demonic djinns), the Islamic faith, and German colonialism takes readers through history to find where a mganga is hiding. You don't find out what happened to the mganga till the very last page.

#Booked20 animal on cover
#PopSugar20 bird on cover
#ReadHarder20 hist fict not WWII
#mamchallenge supernatural @BarbaraTheBibliophage
#jennyis30 suspense @jenniferw88

TrishB Great use for prompts 👍🏻 4y
30 likes1 stack add1 comment