Monday, 10 June 2013

News From Home by Sefi Atta

Genre: Fiction; Interlink books: 320 pages.

Excerpt

 

"A Temporary Position"

One afternoon like so, I thought sod it, I will eat my roast beef on rye sandwich at my workstation for a change. Cath was off sick. She'd coughed so hard the day before her eyes filled with tears and her face turned red. "I'm coming down with something," she'd kept whispering into her handkerchief. To me, it sounded like a smoker's cough.
I smuggled my sandwich bag into my satchel and positioned my satchel on the carpet between my legs where I could easily reach for it. Somehow, my sandwich, now illicit, was much tastier. Perhaps that was the secret to Lagos life after all: the general unlawfulness of the place. I'd barely taken two nibbles from the corner of my rye bread when Steve McQueen came along. I sat up and buzzed him through the door. He smiled and really, for an Irish lad, his teeth were almost African.
"Have you seen Penny?" he asked
She was clip-clopping in the direction of the loos when last I saw her. Steve waited as I chewed under my palm. I'd lowered my sandwich as soon as I saw him. Now, I was diving and feeling around for my satchel so I could slip the sandwich back inside, at the same time rubbing my lips in case there was a trace of horseradish.
Penelope reappeared. Her natural expression was a stare because she wore contact lenses. I imagined her taking a crap, as you're supposed to in interview situations to calm your nerves.
"Ready?" she asked him.
"I was just asking about you," he said.
He opened the door for her and she flung her hair over each shoulder, as if to declare, "He's my fiance. I'm his fiance."

Review

 

News From Home is a collection of stories told by various Nigerian voices. Told with so much heart and originality, the various stories are vividly imaginative and powerfully moving.

"Lawless" is a story told by a young orphan, a university undergraduate who finds his life changed for ever during a military rule that closes down his university. He takes in four of his close friends from school who share a passion for acting and script writing with him. In the wake of frequent electricity failures, they perform plays for a gathering of neighbors in the empty swimming pool of his late father's house to applause from the crowd. This soon sizzles out to boos and jeers when a lack of living amenities, tiredness and poor feeding soon result in their poor renditions of plays.
Eventually, they quit play acting and give up going back to school when their university reopens, for they had gotten a taste of a different kind of acting; as armed robbers and decided that this was indeed their true calling as a group.

This is a book I highly recommend to lovers of African literature.

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