Authors: Nadezda Obradovic (Editor), Chinua Achebe
ISBN-13: 9780385722407, ISBN-10: 0385722400
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Date Published: December 2002
Edition: Reprint
The Anchor Book of Modern African Stories showcases the most innovative writing to arise from the continent. From internationally recognized authors such as Nigeria’s Ben Okri, to newcomer Leila Aboulela from Sudan, together the contributors offer compelling testimonies of life in the midst of historic upheaval. Rich, dense, and topical, this collection is an indispensable guide to the emerging canon of contemporary African fiction.
Contributors: Tayeb Salih, Henri Lopès, Luis Bernardo Honwana, Njabulo S. Ndebele, Olympe Bhely-Quenum, Sindiwe Magona, Charles Mungoshi, William (Bloke) Modisane, William Saidi, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Tololwa Marti Mollel, Nnadzie F. Inyama, Sembne Ousmane, Mohammed Berrada, Ali Deb, Mohamed Moulessehoul, I.N.C. Aniebo, Dambudzo Marechera, Ken Lipenga, Ibrahim Abdel Megid, Ndeley Mokoso, Ken Saro-Wiwa, Alifa Rifaat, Leila Aboulela, Milly Jafta, Ben Okri, Funso Aiyejina, Farida Karodia, Salwa Bakr, Gaele Sobott-Mogwe, Makuchi, Hama Tuma, Ossie O. Enekwe, Adewale Maja-Pearce.
This revised edition of a valuable anthology includes nine new selections by some of Africa's finest young and established writers, offering a fresh examination of the contradictions of colonialism, family conflicts, tribalism, gender issues and the ravages of a rapidly spreading AIDS epidemic. Obradovic, a critic and scholar of African literature, imaginatively ranges the 34 entries by plot, moving from tales of childhood to stories of death and destruction; Chinua Achebe contributes an instructive foreword. In Sudanese writer Tayeb Salih's "A Handful of Dates," a village boy learns to doubt his beloved grandfather's beneficence when the old man mercilessly calls in a debt. "The Advance" by Congolese Henri Lop s is a solemn tale of a maid who loses a beloved son when her insensitive white mistress refuses to grant her an advance to buy him medicine. In "The Brother" by Zimbabwean Charles Mongoshi, a boy comes to stay with his brother, Magufu, in the city, and is stunned by Magufu's dissipation. A wife, one of four married to an arrogant man, waits patiently for time with her husband in "Her Three Days" only to suffer upon her husband's late arrival in Senegalese Sembene Ousmane's stinging attack on polygamy. Egyptian writer Leila Aboulela reflects on culture shock in "The Museum," the artful story of an Egyptian woman studying statistics in England who focuses her resentments and fears on a smitten fellow student. Outstanding in scope, intensity and artistry, these exceptional stories offer a powerful introduction to the pleasures of African literature. (Dec.) Forecast: Another excellent anthology (Under African Skies, edited by Charles Larson; Noonday, 1998) covers similar ground. Students of contemporary African literature will want both; casual readers would do well with either. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Introduction to the Second Edition | ||
Foreword | ||
Preface | ||
A Handful of Dates | 3 | |
The Advance | 8 | |
Papa, Snake & I | 15 | |
The Prophetess | 28 | |
A Child in the Bush of Ghosts | 45 | |
It Was Easter Sunday the Day I Went to Netreg | 57 | |
The Brother | 68 | |
The Dignity of Begging | 94 | |
The Garden of Evil | 104 | |
Bossy | 119 | |
A Night Out | 130 | |
Hot Days, Long Nights | 134 | |
Her Three Days | 143 | |
A Life in Detail | 158 | |
The Three-Piece Suit | 164 | |
The Wicked Tongue | 167 | |
Four Dimensions | 180 | |
Thought Tracks in the Snow | 191 | |
Waiting for a Turn | 198 | |
The Other City | 207 | |
God of Meme | 213 | |
Africa Kills Her Sun | 221 | |
At the Time of the Jasmine | 233 | |
The Museum | 243 | |
The Home-Coming | 259 | |
What the Tapster Saw | 262 | |
The One-Handed Hero | 271 | |
The Woman in Green | 284 | |
Thirty-one Beautiful Green Trees | 303 | |
Smile of Fortune | 314 | |
Slow Poison | 322 | |
The Waldiba Story | 337 | |
The Last Battle | 347 | |
Civil War I-VII | 354 | |
Acknowledgments | 373 |