The Mookse and the Gripes discussion

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An Orchestra of Minorities
Booker Prize for Fiction
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2019 Booker Shortlist: An Orchestra of Minorities


I could be wrong and end up loving it though!
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Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer
(last edited Jul 24, 2019 02:07AM)
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rated it 4 stars

My review
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

The book is narrated by Chinoso’s guardian spirit - his chi. Chapters are told in flashback, effectively in the form of a defense statement drawn up by the chi to the higher powers, setting out Chinoso’s fate and his resulting actions, drawing on ancient Igbo parables, sayings and beliefs in an attempt to explain both, and with the ultimate aim of pleading for divine clemency for Chinoso’s actions, in particular his unwitting harming of a pregnant woman.
On the whole I think this approach works - the chi functions as a form of partial omniscient narrator, successfully re-appropriating the standard (but often criticised) form of third-party Western novelistic narration into a more ancient tradition of African story telling.
And the chi explores dialectic themes, first of loneliness and love in the opening Nigerian section; then fate and destiny, despair and hope in the Cypriot parts; then the ideas of hatred and forgiveness in the closing section.
Where I felt it did not succeed so well, at least for my own enjoyment, was when the chi character itself and its own parallel cosmological world took prominence - lacking any real context (and with the author seemingly unwilling to provide it) I often found myself skipping these sections (especially a lengthy sectional the end to the Cypriot part of the novel) in a mix of bewilderment and impatience.
I often struggled to see this element of the book as much more than a unnecessary and only partly forgivable distraction from the power of the main story.

I also felt the Nonso, the main character, might prove a bit too vain and sexist for Western taste, rendering him unsympathetic. I look forward to the women's view on this book.
I thought the opening scene of this book was wonderful.


https://www.theguardian.com/world/201...
The author recounts his own experience as a Nigerian student in (the largely unrecognised state of Turkish) Northern Cyprus and his realisation that many if not most of the other Nigerian students there had been swindled out of money they had paid in advance for fees and accommodation; and also deceived into believing that entry to Northern Cyprus would give them jobs, prosperity and the right to move anywhere in the EU.
The author himself had been able, via his family, to pay his fees direct to the University and from his degree was able to gain a place as a Creative Writing lecturer in the US. However his experience was very much the exception and one of his fellow students Jay (who appears as a character in this book) committed suicide as a result of his despair on arriving in Cyprus and realising the way he had been deceived. The author was clearly hugely affected by this incident and wondered about the Nigerian who had carried out the swindle, who was presumably unaware that his small momentary gain had such cataclysmic consequences. The article also covers an image of Northern Cyprus which stuck with the author - trapped birds trying to escape their fate.
In interviews about the book, the author has also talked about how this incident and other things he witnessed in Cyprus caused him to examine what he sees as the great topic of literature - the contradiction between free will and fate and how he interprets them through, not so much traditional Western views, but through the prism of the ancient Igbo philosophy of his ancestors

Given a number of the expansive books on the longlist I feel that the judges may agree with his take.
https://themillions.com/2015/06/the-a...
Which starts
In one of his essays, the late Nigerian writer Chinua Achebe stated that “no one be fooled by the fact that we write in English, for we intend to do unheard-of things with it.” That “we” is, in essence, an authoritative oratorical posture that cast him as a representative of a group, a kindred of writers who — either by design or fate — have adopted English as the language of literary composition. With these words, it seems that to Achebe the intention to do “unheard-of” things with language is a primary factor in literary creation. He is right. And this should be the most important factor
And which is a very interesting read
AND
https://themillions.com/2017/02/93351...
Which starts
Like most other art forms, fiction has undergone many configurations over the years, but its core has remained, as always, the aesthetic pleasure of reading. When we read, we connect to the immaterial source of the story through its outstretched limbs. The “limb” or variants of it are what the writer has deemed fit for us to see, to gaze at and admire. It is not often the whole. But one of the major ways in which fiction has changed today — from the second half of the 20th century especially — is that most of its fiction reveals all its limbs to us all at once. Nothing is hidden behind the esoteric wall of mystery or metaphysics.

Hope to get round to it soon, but realistically it is unlikely to be before next week. It is currently third on my Booker to read list after Night Boat to Tangier and My Sister, after which I will only have Girl Woman Other and the three unpublished ones to go.


This is one of the few I have read and I have been reading your notes and updates. I look at the novel as representative of the recent wave of good fiction coming from first Nigeria and now from other areas in Africa. I would not mind seeing the novel shortlisted.

I haven't read your notes and links in detail yet GY, but will do soon.

Asking not as criticism but wondering whether it is deliberate. The chi narrator talks rather grandly, but I'm not sure whether that would mean he would use the wrong word occasionally.

In this one, I was interested in the different world view presented, and especially interested because it seemed so different to the other book I read that was based on Igbo cosmology (Freshwater). This one seemed much more benign and distant where Freshwater seem more malign and involved.
I wasn't that taken with the story, although discovering from Gumble's Yard's review that there is a true story behind it makes it more interesting in retrospect.


Only 145 pages in, but this one feels like hard work. After wading through The Famished Road last year another long book about spirits is not an appealing prospect!

Hugh wrote: "I didn't spot that one - could be a typo!"
Apparently put there to check people weren't skim reading:

(yes this should probably be on Ducks thread but that is currently discussing mass shootings)

Emezi's spirits are more like Okri's than Obioma's (so far!), but Freshwater is also easier to follow than Okri.




A related problem with the book is the uneven register of the narrator's English. He explains early on that he had inhabited a host who was an English speaker, but since the Igbo world, and his host, are both non-native to English, the narrator, or should I say author, can't decide on exactly how western and English the narrator should be. Saying things like 'in the year the White Man refers to as 1969' over and over is simply annoying. As is referring to Jesus Christ as Jisos Kraist...repeatedly. And then the narrator uses a sophisticated Christian concept such as 'a face that bore the visible stigmata of his own suffering.'
The final problem I have with this book is the utterly ludicrous plot. Everything goes wrong, cubed. And then cubed again. I found myself giggling during the nurse-brings-him-home-for-cake scene. Come on! And then the ending of the book. Guess what? Things are about to get much, much worse. I see no point in this unremittingly grim plot. No lesson that this reader learned, and absolutely no connection between the cosmology and plot.
I finished this last night, but have not yet written a review, at least partly because my views on it are incoherent and contradictory - there were parts I loved and parts I hated - I appreciated what Obioma was doing with his chi narrator but at the same time I have seen more than enough explanations of that belief system from Ben Okri (in particular) and to a lesser extent Akwaeke Emezi. Using a Greek tragedy as a framework inevitably makes the whole thing very bleak, unless you view it from an immortal divine perspective. Perhaps the metaphor of humans in the hands of the gods of fates as defenceless chickens was a little overdone. The core story about the exploitation of Nigerian students in Cyprus was very well done.

Gumble's Yard wrote: "Good summary. Given the strength of the longlist the flaws in this book mean I increasingly don’t think it should be shortlisted and it was the one book which if anything got worse on a second read..."
Yes, in a weaker year it might be shortlist material, but of the 10 I have read or started, seven are stronger, and I expect at least one of the remaining three to join them.
Yes, in a weaker year it might be shortlist material, but of the 10 I have read or started, seven are stronger, and I expect at least one of the remaining three to join them.


I think I'd have felt more comfortable with the chi narrator if I hadn't read The Famished Road last year, which is longer and harder to follow - this is not Obioma's fault.

Glad you guys agree - I've been careful not to read reviews or much of what's been written above to avoid any spoilers
Books mentioned in this topic
An Orchestra of Minorities (other topics)The Famished Road (other topics)
Freshwater (other topics)
An Orchestra of Minorities (other topics)
The second novel by Nigerian writer Chigozie Obioma, whose debut, The Fishermen was Booker shortlisted in 2015.
A contemporary twist on the Odyssey, An Orchestra of Minorities is narrated by the chi, or spirit of a young poultry farmer named Chinonso. His life is set off course when he sees a woman who is about to jump off a bridge. Horrified by her recklessness, he hurls two of his prized chickens off the bridge. The woman, Ndali, is stopped in her tracks.
Chinonso and Ndali fall in love but she is from an educated and wealthy family. When her family objects to the union on the grounds that he is not her social equal, he sells most of his possessions to attend college in Cyprus. But when he arrives in Cyprus, he discovers that he has been utterly duped by the young Nigerian who has made the arrangements for him. Penniless, homeless, we watch as he gets further and further away from his dream and from home.
Published in the UK and the US by Little, Brown (an imprint of Hachette).