• HOME
  • INFLUENCE

    African Dreamer: A Peter Beard retrospective

    beard1 smallIn 1996, Vanity Fair's Leslie Bennetts 

    • CULTURE
    • POLITICS
  • INNOVATE

    The Best: Top 10 Mobile Phone Apps in Africa

    main image africa appAfrican technology developers are coming up with award winning innovative farming, social and health-themed mobile-p

    • DEVELOPMENT
    • TECH
  • INSPIRE

    5 Reasons Nairobi Is Such An Incredible City!

    wiens nairobi_night

    • IGNITE
    • IDEATE
    • THE BEST
  • IMAGE

    Africa's emerging super models and the politics of skin colour in the fashion industry

    model nyasha 2Following in the footsteps of Liya Kebede, Alek Wek and the famous Iman, is a stunning array of young African women

    • ENTERTAINMENT
    • FASHION
  • HOME
  • INFLUENCE
    • CULTURE
    • POLITICS
  • INNOVATE
    • DEVELOPMENT
    • TECH
  • INSPIRE
    • IGNITE
    • IDEATE
    • THE BEST
  • IMAGE
    • ENTERTAINMENT
    • FASHION

Home THE BESTThe 10 best contemporary African books – 201 ...

Previous Next

The 10 best contemporary African books – 2012

Posted by: International News Feed, October 29, 2012

From a reinterpreted Heart of Darkness to a barstool in Congo, this is a list of Africa’s best contemporary novels in 2012, as compiled by Ellah Wakatama Allfrey, deputy editor of Granta. Enjoy.

From a reinterpreted Heart of Darkness to a barstool in Congo, this is a list of Africa’s best contemporary novels in 2012, as compiled by Ellah Wakatama Allfrey, deputy editor of Granta. Enjoy.

Lyrics Alley
Leila Aboulela (2010)
Set in mid-50s, pre-independence Sudan, Aboulela’s third novel takes us on a journey to Egypt and postwar Britain as we follow the life of Nur, the cosmopolitan son of a powerful businessman, who finds his dreams dashed following an accident. This is also the story of the conflict between Nur’s traditional mother and the city-bred Egyptian co-wife whose arrival threatens the stability of the family. Though set mostly in the world of the northern Sudanese, Aboulela’s gentle, poetic prose is a perfect counterpoint to the time of turmoil and upheaval she chronicles.

The Memory of Love
Aminatta Forna (2010)
Forna’s memoir, The Devil That Danced on the Water, was a daughter’s search for the truth of a murdered father’s last days, and for a country – Sierra Leone – lost to civil war. In this, her second novel, she takes the reader to Freetown in peacetime – in 1969 and the present day. An English psychologist, Adrian Lockheart, hears the confessions of a dying man, Elias Cole. What unfolds is an unforgettable love story, a tale of complicity, betrayal and trauma that perhaps does more to tell us about this bitter conflict – and to make that telling stick – than any work of non-fiction can.

Zoo City
Lauren Beukes (2010)
The winner of the 2011 Arthur C Clarke award, this urban fantasy-noir thriller merges visions of dystopia with faultless plotting and Shona cosmology, bringing the spirit possession of traditional religion to a near-future Johannesburg. Zinzi December finds things, even when she doesn’t want to. When she’s hired to find a missing teenage pop star, it’s almost certain that her shavi (a compulsion or talent with a bitter cost) will bring disaster. There is rhyme and reason to this imagined future – and it’s a believable and engrossing vision.

The Hairdresser of Harare
Tendai Huchu (2010)
This glorious book defies classification with its astute sociopolitical commentary nestling inside the appealing, often comic story of a young woman who will not accept defeat. With a light touch and real skill, Huchu takes us through the life-sapping economic realities of contemporary Harare via the story of Vimbai, the hairdresser, as she struggles to make a home for herself and her young son. She’s lost a beloved brother to the diaspora and when a new (male) stylist joins the salon, it looks as if she will soon lose her best clients, maybe even her job.

Looking for Transwonderland
Noo Saro-Wiwa (2012)
With this memoir, Noo Saro-Wiwa, daughter of the murdered environmental and political activist Ken Saro-Wiwa, establishes herself as a pioneer in contemporary travel writing – Africa as seen by Africans. Travelling from the mayhem of Lagos across Nigeria, she brings family history and the sometimes conflicted eye of an African raised away from the motherland to look at this vast, fascinating land. Only one who calls the country home could write such an honest account of contemporary Nigeria.

Broken Glass
Alain Mabanckou (2009)
Iconoclastic, packed with literary and cultural references from across the globe, scatological humour and a biting wit, Mabanckou’s writing demands a strong stomach. In this urban novel written from the heart of Africa (Congo), our narrator sits on a stool in a bar called Credit Gone West and scribbles the stories of the convicts, conmen, cuckolds and the dispossessed who drink beside him. All the while, he nurses his own secret heartbreak, disappointment and thwarted ambition. Mabanckou is one of the continent’s greatest writers and he’s getting better with each book.

African Metropolitan Architecture
David Adjaye (2011)
With a mix of photographs and text about buildings, and the spaces and lives around them, this is an arresting visual introduction to cities across the continent. Part of a seven-volume work, African Metropolitan Architecture features 53 conurbations grouped by terrain. Focusing on how cities grow – the colonial legacy, the natural environment, the social and political structures supporting them – this is emphatically not a coffee-table book but,  rather, a learned journey into the vibrant, beating heart of contemporary African life.

Beneath the Lion’s Gaze
Maaza Mengiste (2010)
Set in the years of the red terror (the period of upheaval following the violent communist revolution in Ethiopia) in the 1970s, Mengiste’s novel follows the lives of two brothers and their father: Dawit, the student revolutionary, his elder brother, Yonas, who seeks solace in tradition and prayer, and their father, Hailu, a surgeon who is summoned to save the life of a young woman who has been horrifically tortured by the secret police. His task is to heal her just enough to send her back to prison. The choices he makes will change the course of the family’s life.

Heart of Darkness
David Zane Mairowitz, Joseph Conrad and Catherine Anyango (2010)
What is lost in the adaptation of the text of Conrad’s novel is more than redeemed by the illustrations of Catherine Anyango, an artist of Swedish and Kenyan parentage. The exquisitely rendered drawings are dark and often harrowing, articulating the moral dilemmas of colonialism. Whether or not one is a fan of the original, the intelligence and political awareness of this endeavour – and of Anyango’s illustrations in particular – are a brilliant example of the power of the imagination in forging new interpretations of stories we all thought we knew so well.

Mama Miti
Donna Jo Napoli/Kadir Nelson (2010)
In this beautifully illustrated tribute to the Kenyan Nobel laureate and environmentalist, the late Wangari Maathai, Napoli and Nelson provide modern morality tales of our relationship with the natural world. In poetic prose, the book tells of women who bring their problems to Mama Miti: we have no firewood; the cows are sick; the water is polluted. Instead of advising how to get NGO grants, Mama Miti reveals a bush whose leaves can heal livestock, a species of tree whose roots will purify the water and another that will meet their needs for fuel.

____________________________________
Source:

As chosen by Ellah Wakatama Allfrey, deputy editor of Granta Magazine, The Observer, Sunday 26 August 2012

Tags: 10 best contemporary African books, African Contemporary Literature, African Contemporary Writers, African Metropolitan Architecture by David Adjaye, Alain Mabanckou, Aminatta Forna, Beneath the Lion’s Gaze by Maaza Mengiste, Broken Glass by Alain Mabanckou, Catherine Anyango, David Adjaye, David Zane Mairowitz, Donna Jo Napol, Heart of Darkness by David Zane Mairowitz, Joseph Conrad, Joseph Conrad and Catherine Anyango, Kadir Nelson, Lauren Beukes, Leila Aboulela, Looking for Transwonderland by Noo Saro-Wiwa, Lyrics Alley by Leila Aboulela, Maaza Mengiste, Mama Miti by Donna Jo Napoli/Kadir Nelson, Noo Saro-Wiwa, Tendai Huchu, The Hairdresser of Harare by Tendai Huchu, The Memory of Love by Aminatta Forna, Zoo City by Lauren Beukes

Share!
Tweet

International News Feed

About the author
International News Feed

This article was excerpted from an international news agency feed, source or website. Please see the footnote for details and relevant article links.

Related Posts

jab1

Sorry for the delay: Just a Band and the new AfroElectriK Pop

It’s 9AM on a Tuesday morning, it’s kinda dead at work, so to kick the boredom fact ...

Our torture was a victory - Sekai Holland's Zimbabwean story

kere 7

Diébédo Francis Kéré imbues mud with poetry and gives Africans a future

Burkina Faso’s Francis Kéré is an architect and artist, mixing a little mud with a lot of ...
main image africa app

The Best: Top 10 Mobile Phone Apps in Africa

African technology developers are coming up with award winning innovative farming, social and h ...

Comments

comments

Popular
Recent
Comments
Tags
  • mario6

    The best: 72+ African wise proverbs and inspiring quotes

    June 22, 2012
    Somalia End of Piracy

    The ‘Somali Pirate’ Who Never Was

    April 3, 2013
    best-books Memory_of_Love_HB

    The 10 best contemporary African books – 2012

    October 29, 2012
    opp3

    Telling Africa’s Story Differently: The White Correspondent’s Burden

    August 15, 2012
    olympic-main-feat 3

    2012 London Olympics: Your guide to Africa’s best athletes and nations

    June 26, 2012
  • Screen Shot 2013-05-13 at 7.14.09 AM

    Bright pinks on dark espresso skin, by Bellesa Afr ...

    May 20, 2013
    mutu 3

    Myth, power, art and the female form

    May 20, 2013
    fb child what-a-face s

    Africa must think big for its children

    May 17, 2013
    mitumba3

    Why your donated clothes could be killing the Afri ...

    May 14, 2013
    digmain

    10 digital innovations changing Africa in 2013

    May 8, 2013
  • [...] that’s what I decided to do for the ne ...

    May 20, 2013

    How Africa became a guiding beacon for one man suf ...

    May 2, 2013

    Samsung and Google Extending Their Reach In Africa ...

    April 30, 2013

    Inspire: Malaika Design - unique, everytime, every ...

    April 30, 2013

    RT @Afritorial: A Youssou N'Dour Introspective htt ...

    April 28, 2013
  • “Intelligent Depositor” ATM #kidschances #LastFamine #Mubarak 10 best contemporary African books

Find Us on Facebook

Featured Authors

Neva Mwiti
Neva Mwiti
  • Myth, power, art and the female form
Kangai
Kangai
  • Bright pinks on dark espresso skin, by Bellesa Africa.
Sifa Mtango-Zadarnowska
Sifa Mtango-Zadarnowska
  • Tales from a Diaspora Chic: Superwoman don’t live here anymore

Latest Tweets

  • Myth, power, art and the female form http://t.co/bU9LpwsYpA
  • Bright pinks on dark espresso skin, by Bellesa Africa. http://t.co/yxaezzmwgY
  • Phiona Mutesi makes the right chess moves http://t.co/pXRj6ty1dg

Recent Pins

Follow Me on Pinterest
Followed by 614 people.
?

Pinterest Badge by Skipser

Related Posts (YARPP)

  1. Africa’s 100 Best Books of the 20th Century
  2. The best: 72+ African wise proverbs and inspiring quotes

Tags

Africa Africa's middle class Africa development Africa holiday Africa innovation African development African fashion African innovation african music African photography African technology Africa safari Africa technology Africa travel Alek Wek China in Africa Dr Claudette Carr Egypt ethiopia facebook ghana innovation in Africa Invisible Children Joseph Kony Kenya Kenya elections 2013 Kony 2012 Liya Kebede M-Pesa Mali microfinance Nairobi Nairobi iHub Nelson Mandela nigeria Olympics 2012 poverty in Africa Safaricom Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia south africa Tanzania Uganda Zimbabwe

Terms and Conditions

Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions and User Agreement. Afritorial.com © 2013. All rights reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached, or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Afrikkana.com and its copyright holders - Influence Media Pty Ltd. For more information, please contact us via email.

Trending on Facebook

Archives

  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
Copyright © 2013 Afritorial & Influence Media Pty Ltd
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT