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review
swynn
Igifu | Scholastique Mukasonga
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Pickpick

(2020) It's a collection of five stories set in and around the Rwandan genocide. It's a gut-wrenching theme, Mukasonga's prose is graceful and restrained, and the stories will break your heart. The last story, “Grief,“ centered on a woman who attends funerals of strangers in search of comfort for the unobserved deaths of her own family, broke mine. This is what stories are for, so much that I found it hard to take more than one or two at a time

ChaoticMissAdventures I read her autobiography this year, it is just devastating what her family went through. I hope the writing she has done has helped her process. They are incredibly important reads. 3d
swynn @ChaoticMissAdventures I haven't read “Cockroaches“ yet, or “Our Lady of the Nile,“ but can recommend “The Barefoot Woman“, which is about her mother, and “Kibogo“, about cultural clash between European and Rwandan religions. I'm so grateful for her witness on these events. (edited) 2d
27 likes2 comments
quote
swynn
Igifu | Scholastique Mukasonga
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You were a displaced little girl like me, sent off to Nyamata for being a Tutsi, so you knew just as I did the implacable enemy who lived deep inside us, the merciless overlord forever demanding a tribute we couldn't hope to scrape up, the implacable tormentor relentlessly gnawing at our bellies and dimming our eyes, you know who I'm talking about: Igifu, Hunger, given to us at birth like a cruel guardian angel ...

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

blurb
Dilara
BARZAKH | Moussa Ould Ebnou
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Reading Barzakh, a fantasy/SF novel by Mauritanian author Moussa Ould Ebnou. Doing a bit of research on Aoudaghost/Awdaghost, a city lost to the desert in the Middle-Ages, and on the Sahel region is helping a lot w/ timeline & geography.
Pic by Luca Abbate from https://wildmanlife.com/aoudaghost-economic-hub-of-the-sahara/ This page contains pics & detailed info & matches quite closely the descriptions in the book. Useful.
#Mauritania

review
GatheringBooks
Our Sister Killjoy | Ama Ata Aidoo, Aidoo
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Pickpick

#FeelinTheLove Day 26: #SisterLove - This shared womanity or sense of girlhood is evident in the tagged book I read for #DecolonizeBookshelves - irrespective of one‘s skin color, to be female is to belong to “the ranks of the wretched.” One of the really great titles I read from the list of “Decolonize Your Bookshelf in 50 Books.” My full review: https://wp.me/pDlzr-opq

Eggs Sounds good 👍🏼 2mo
36 likes1 comment
review
Billypar
Maps | Nuruddin Farah
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Pickpick

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. 4mo
BarbaraBB Your review sounds dreamy already! 4mo
Anna40 Great review! 4mo
Billypar @BarbaraBB @Anna40 Thanks! It was a tough one to sum up. 4mo
36 likes4 comments
blurb
JackHowley5
The voice | Gabriel Okara

Great story to teach children about the power of their inner conscious

quote
JackHowley5
The voice | Gabriel Okara

“There is a voice inside of you that whispers all day long, I feel that this is right for me, I know that this is wrong.”

review
JackHowley5
The voice | Gabriel Okara
Pickpick

This poem is about a narrator who listens to the voice inside their head and decides to follow it. This poem teaches the great lesson that kids should listen to their inner voice and trust their instincts

review
JulietteReadsALot
Houseboy | Ferdinand Oyono
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Pickpick

3/5
Written in 1956, it's a novel about the life of a houseboy under colonialism.
From the first pages we learn the tragic end of the houseboy, then we get to read his diary: how he came to be a houseboy, his daily life, etc.
Segregation, hypocrisy, racism, black/white relationships are the main themes.
It's a level B1 read in French, some words/phrases may be difficult for a non-native.

review
Bookwomble
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Pickpick

It's Amos Tutuola so it's bonkers! 🤪
While all of the novels I've read by Tutuola are episodic, this one is actually a collection of short stories, folklore retellings with a bit less of the darkly macabre & horror that inhabits his other works, which isn't to say people don't get eaten, bits chopped off them or get transformed into creepy-crawlies.
Perhaps familiarity affects my perception: I found these marginally less interesting but still 3½⭐