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21 Mar 2010

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Archive for the ‘Nigeria’ Category

A Divinely Delightful Evening with Oprah Book Club Author Uwem Akpan

March 17th, 2010 by Tracey

Uwem Akpan

Say You're One of ThemUwem Akpan and fanRinging laughter is what most guests will remember from the launch of Uwem Akpan’s Say You’re One of Them. Visiting South Africa for the Time of the Writer Festival, Akpan was able to make time for his Joburg fans at the Nelson Mandela Square Exclusive Books this week. Akpan, a Catholic priest, delighted launch guests with his self-deprecating attitude and genuine warmth.

Say You’re One of Them is, of course, the collection of short stories that caught the attention of Oprah Winfrey, who made it one of her Book Club selections. Akpan says the resulting attention has allowed him to travel around the world – mostly through writers’ festivals invites. He speaks of writing as a “gift” – something that he needed to appreciate by acting on. When writing his book, he was often at the mercy of Nigeria’s on again, off again electricity supply, but he persevered. He wrote mainly at night on local computers while attending to his seminary studies and parishioners during the day. Asked for advice by an aspiring author in the audience, he said, “If you want to write, write!”. He said that a writer must be “ready to sit alone in that room, tell their friends not to visit and stay in that space”. Saying he “stumbled” upon his gift, he spent many years developing it including going to a writers’ school.

During the launch he said he’d originally aspired to be a columnist, writing a package of 4 opinion pieces which he sent off to various newspapers to try his luck. Feeling down and depressed when he didn’t receive a positive response, he eventually tried fiction – asking himself, “What do I have to lose?”. He was lucky, with several publishers keen to pick up his work. As a newly developing author he shared how he balked initially at being published because he didn’t feel he was ready. Finally, a year later, his short story, “My Parents’ Bedroom”, was published.

Asked how real the stories he writes are to him he replied that first he writes, then he researches. For him, “research is not the story”. But he does spend time sending his work out for comments and feedback, particularly when it comes to checking cultural details and honouring the local dialogue or “patois”. It is clear that although not biographical, the stories and children he writes about move him greatly. “I intentionally wanted to write about things that bothered me,” he said. For the future, he would love to write a novel but that is something he will need to learn how to do.

It was clear that the crowd at this launch – which comprised people from all over the world, as it happened – were only too happy to enjoy a touch of the Oprah magic that now surrounds Father Uwem Akpan.

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18 photos

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Meet Oprah Book Club Author Uwem Akpan at Exclusive Books Mandela Square

March 9th, 2010 by Tracey

Say You're One of Them - Johannesburg Launch Invite

Say You're One of ThemExclusive Books and Penguin Books take pleasure in inviting you to come and meet Uwem Akpan.

His book of short stories, Say You’re One of Them, is Oprah Winfreys’ latest book club selection and the winner of the 2009 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best First Book in the Africa region.

Akpan’s extraordinary stories centre on African conflicts as seen through the eyes of children and describes their resilience and endurance in heartbreaking detail. From child trafficking to inter-religious conflicts, the author reveals in beautiful prose the resilience and endurance of children faced with the harsh consequences of deprivation and terror.

We look forward to seeing you there.

Event Details

  • Date: Tuesday, 16 March 2010
  • Time: 6:00 PM for 6:30 PM
  • Venue: Exclusive Books, Mandela Square, Shop 111, Upper Level
    Mandela Square
    Sandton, Johannesburg | Map
  • RSVP: thesquare@exclusivebooks.co.za, 011 784 5416

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Say You’re One of Them Author Uwem Akpan in South Africa this Month

March 4th, 2010 by Tracey

Say You're One of ThemUwem Akpan'“…usually short stories leave you wanting something and you’re like, huh, what happened?… “This is a first for me because
each one of these five stories really just left me gasping. Just an incredible book.”

– Oprah Winfrey

2009 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize winner and Oprah Book Club author Uwem Akpan will be visiting South Africa this month, giving press interviews and attending the Time of the Writer in Durban.

If you’re in Durban from 9 – 13 March, don’t miss your chance to get to know a stunning new voice on the African writing scene.

About the book

Uwem Akpan’s stunning stories humanise the perils of poverty and violence so piercingly that few readers will feel they’ve ever encountered Africa so immediately. The eight-year-old narrator of “An Ex-Mas Feast” needs only enough money to buy books and pay fees in order to attend school. Even when his twelve-year-old sister takes to the streets to raise these meager funds, his dream can’t be granted. Food comes first. His family lives in a street shanty in Nairobi, Kenya, but their way of both loving and taking advantage of each other strikes a universal chord.

In the second of his stories, Akpan takes us far beyond what we thought we knew about the tribal conflict in Rwanda. The story is told by a young girl, who, with her little brother, witnesses the worst possible scenario between parents. They are asked to do the previously unimaginable in order to protect their children. This singular collection will also take the reader inside Nigeria, Benin, and Ethiopia, revealing in beautiful prose the harsh consequences of life for children in Africa.

Akpan’s voice is a literary miracle, rendering lives of almost unimaginable deprivation and terror into stories that are nothing short of transcendent.

About the author

Uwem Akpan was born in the village of Ikot Akpan Eda in southern Nigeria. After studying philosophy and English at Creighton and Gonzaga universities, he studied theology for three years at the Catholic University of East Africa. He was ordained as a Jesuit priest in 2003 and received his MFA in creative writing from the University of Michigan in 2006. “My Parents’ Bedroom”, a story included in this, his first collection, was one of five short stories by African writers chosen as finalists for the Caine Prize for African Writing. In 2007 Akpan began a teaching assignment at a Jesuit college in Harare, Zimbabwe.

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Photo courtesy Luke Coppen @ Wordpress

 

Extract from Chinua Achebe’s New Book: “What Nigeria Means to Me”

January 25th, 2010 by Tracey

The Education of a British-Protected ChildGirls at War and Other StoriesChinua AchebeAn extract from an essay collected in Achebe’s forthcoming The Education of a British-Protected Child:

Nigerian nationality was for me and my generation an acquired taste – like cheese. Or better still, like ballroom dancing. Not dancing per se, for that came naturally; but this titillating version of slow-slow-quick-quick-slow performed in close body contact with a female against a strange, elusive beat. I found, however, that once I had overcome my initial awkwardness I could do it pretty well.

Perhaps these irreverent analogies would only occur to someone like me, born into a strongly multiethnic, multi lingual, multireligious, somewhat chaotic colonial situation. The first passport I ever carried described me as a “British Protected Person”, an unexciting identity embodied in a phrase that no one was likely to die for. I don’t mean it was entirely devoid of emotive meaning. After all, “British” meant you were located somewhere in the flaming red portion of the world map, a quarter of the entire globe in those days and called “the British Empire, where the sun never sets”. It had a good ring to it in my childhood ears – a magical fraternity, vague but vicariously glorious.

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Photo courtesy PEN American Center

 

From the Paris Review Archives: Chinua Achebe’s Art of Fiction

December 10th, 2009 by Tracey

Chinua AchebeThe Education of a British-Protected ChildGirls at War and Other StoriesThe Paris Review has made available its classic 1994 interview with Chinua Achebe on the art of fiction, which was conducted by Jerome Brooks. Achebe’s two latest books are Girls at War and The Education of a British-Protected Child.

I don’t lay down the law for anybody else. But I think writers are not only writers, they are also citizens. They are generally adults. My position is that serious and good art has always existed to help, to serve, humanity. Not to indict. I don’t see how art can be called art if its purpose is to frustrate humanity. To make humanity uncomfortable, yes. But intrinsically to be against humanity, that I don’t take. This is why I find racism impossible, because this is against humanity. Some people think, Well, what he’s saying is we must praise his people. For God’s sake! Go and read my books. I don’t praise my people. I am their greatest critic.

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Image courtesy Angela Radulescu

 

Watch the Oprah Book Club Webcast for Uwem Akpan’s Say You’re One of Them

November 11th, 2009 by Tracey

Uwem and OprahSay You're One of ThemOprah Winfrey, Facebook and the websites Oprah.com and CNN.com introduced Nigerian author Uwem Akpan to the world last night, as Oprah interviewed him on his book of short stories – and her latest book club selection – Say You’re One of Them.

The event, a live webcast, took place in the wee hours of the South African night – but if you missed it, you can watch the show as it unfolded at Oprah.com. CNN’s Anderson Cooper joined the conversation, as well as fellow book club members from around the world.

Oprah has also posted several readings from the book online. Here’s more from Say You’re One of Them and Oprah.com:

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Photo courtesy Oprah’s Book Club

 

Live, Interactive Oprah Book Club Event for Uwem Akpan’s Say You’re One of Them

October 26th, 2009 by Tracey

Say You're One of ThemOprah.com is joining forces with CNN.com and Facebook to present a LIVE Oprah’s Book Club interactive web event on Monday, November 9, 2009 at 9:00 pm Eastern Standard Time in the USA (that’s 4am on Nov 10th in South Africa) with author Uwem Akpan!

The webcast will be a 90-minute worldwide event, during which readers can submit their questions for the author and potentially be featured during the live discussion.

The special online event will be streamed live simultaneously from CNN.com’s video player on Oprah.com and CNN.com and will utilize Facebook Connect, enabling users to comment through their Facebook profiles without ever leaving the live webcast.

As the biggest book club in the world, Oprah’s Book Club has nearly 2 million online members. Enrollment is free and provides members with access to benefits such as online discussion groups and reading questions.

To join Oprah’s Book Club or to register for this web event, log on to oprah.com/bookclubevent.

Additionally, CNN will tap into iReport, CNN’s user-generated news community, and encourage online users who have already read the book to share their comments about what moved them through video or photo submissions. The iReport submissions, along with questions or comments submitted via Oprah.com and Facebook, may be incorporated into the live online event.

The iReport submissions, along with questions or comments submitted via Oprah.com and Facebook, may be incorporated into the live online event.

Don’t miss it!

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Sunday Independent Feature on Karen King-Aribisala and The Hangman’s Game

October 23rd, 2009 by Tracey

The Hangman's Game

King hung by her own subject

By Maureen Isaacson

Karen King-Aribisala is an exceptional talent. She won the Commonwealth Prize (African Region) for the Best First Book in 1990 for Our Wife and Other Stories, and the 2008 Commonwealth Prize (Africa region) for the Best Book for The Hangman’s Game.

I had interviewed her several years ago, about Clicking Tongues, which she modelled on Chaucer’s Canterbury’s Tales. As well as writing brilliant, offbeat, poetic prose, King is a performer, and declaims her work with stunning effect.

In an interview in Johannesburg last year we spoke about The Hangman’s Game (Peepal Press), an affecting novel, which observes parallels in the slavery imposed by General Sani Abacha’s military regime in the 1980s and the conditions that led to the Demarara slave revolt in 1823.

“In the book, Nigerians are as enslaved as are the blacks in Demarara. There is a connection between the hanging of the narrator’s friend (a Ken Saro-Wiwa-like figure) by Sani Abacha and the hanging of the missionary, John Smith, who went to Demarara.

“Also, Jesus was hung on the cross.” said King.

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SMS the Sunday Independent to Win a Set of Penguin African Writers Series Books

October 19th, 2009 by Tracey

Black SunlightThe Hangman's GameNeighboursWeep Not, ChildAs the Crow FliesGirls at War and Other StoriesTo enter a Sunday Independent draw to win one of three complete sets of the initial Penguin African Writers Series publications, follow these instructions, published in yesterday’s paper:

To enter: SMS the letters TSI (space) followed by your name and surname to 34110. SMSes cost R2 each. General competition rules apply. The lines will be open from 6am [Sunday] until 11pm [Monday 19 Oct]. Winners will be notified telephonically.

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This February: Chinua Achebe’s The Education of a British-Protected Child

October 7th, 2009 by Tracey

The Education of a British-Protected ChildChinua AchebeChinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart is a classic, must-read, perspective-altering book. Achebe wrote it over fifty years ago and it’s as provocative today as it was then.

In February, Achebe latest work will arrive in South Africa: The Education of a British-Protected Child, a “collection of old and recent essays that piece together the arc of his literary life”.

The new book has already attracted notice in many parts of the world; here’s a great summarizing story from Reuters:

Chinua Achebe, the grandfather of modern African literature, first began telling stories as a means to reaching the truth. Fiction, he knew, could sometimes strike deeper than real life.

More than 50 years ago Achebe wrote “Things Fall Apart,” a novel about an African tribe's fatal brush with British colonialism in the 1800s that told the story of colonialism for the first time from an African perspective.

Written in English, “Things Fall Apart” told a world audience about the upheaval that Africa had endured. It was translated into 50 languages and sold more than 8 million copies worldwide.

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