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Maps
Maps | Nuruddin Farah
3 posts | 3 read | 1 reading | 2 to read
Winner of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature, Nuruddin Farah is one of Africa's most respected contemporary writers. Maps is the first novel in his acclaimed Blood in the Sun trilogy, set in his native land. Askar lost his father in the bloody war between Ethiopia and Somalia, and his mother died giving birth to him. Taken in by Misra, a kindhearted woman, he grows up in a small village. But as an adolescent, a true child of his times, he begins to feel suffocated there and goes to live with his cosmopolitan aunt and uncle in the capital. In dangerous and turbulent Mogadiscio, Somalis are struggling to recreate a national identity that has been destroyed by the upheavals of modernity and the betrayals of civil war. Askar throws himself into radical political activity in the midst of the turmoil. As allegations of murder and treason are leveled at Misra, Askar's personal sense identity and Somalia's political boundaries will be challenged with a ferocity he could have never imagined.
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Billypar
Maps | Nuruddin Farah
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A strange story of a boy growing up in late 1970s Somalia, and after being passed from his adopted mother to his wealthier aunt and uncle, must choose between the university and fighting in the insurgency against Ethiopia. His mother is originally from Ethiopia, making for some interesting dynamics where the person he is closest to is identified as 'the enemy'. Weirder still is how the close quarters of their housing affects their relationship 👇

Billypar He can't avoid noticing when his mother has sex or her period (this novel has more descriptions of menstrual cycles than any other I've read). Many of these portions are written in a surreal, dreamy style and made me think the author was influenced by some kind of psychoanalytic theories that were popular after Freud. I can't say I loved those parts, but overall it was an intriguing character study set against a pivotal moment in Somalian history. 5d
BarbaraBB Your review sounds dreamy already! 5d
Anna40 Great review! 5d
Billypar @BarbaraBB @Anna40 Thanks! It was a tough one to sum up. 4d
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Tove_Reads
Maps | Nuruddin Farah
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Growing up, first in Ethiopia, then in Somalia, during the times when the countries are looking as much for their own identities as the humans living in these countries. Interesting book giving many insights to living in Somalia. #Somalia #ReadTheWorld