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She Would Be King
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She Would Be King, by Wayétu Moore
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...Moore’s brand of magic realism is close kin to Beloved and The Underground Railroad, bending the rules of history and the natural world in order to move both closer to justice. When it comes to explorations of slavery in novels, there is little patience left for catalogues of atrocities, but an abiding interest in finding fresh ways of exhuming something useful from the murk. Give us alternative histories, unfamiliar forms, genre-leaping speculations. Moore’s novel pulls this off with an epic sweep. It’s a tour de force that crescendoes to its conclusion, reimagining the birth of Liberia in a way that is tender, humane and suffused with lyricism."
Warning, the rest of Sara Collins' review includes spoilers.
https://www.theguardian.com/books/201...


Thoughts hopefully next week!



I agree with everyone else that the back half of the book kind of fizzled out. Both June Dey and Norma, though symbolically important to what the book was saying, actually served no real narrative purpose in the end, which was really disappointing as I liked them both and wanted to see them get a stronger storyline (or even just see more of what they were up to after they parted ways.
Still lots to like in it and find interesting I knew very little about the founding of Liberia, nor the role of America's 'back to Africa' colonisation in it (am more familiar with the British 'Back to Africa' project and Sierra Leone), but knowing it now, I am very glad that the principal character here was an indigenous woman. I would have liked to see more indigenous characters in more than just passing though. I would also have liked to have seen more of the diplomacy between the various indigenous peoples, who seemed to have magically all gathered by the end. Reading into Liberian history now, the book also seems to have ended on a much more positive note for the coloniser-indigenous relationship than actually happened for a very long time.
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She Would Be King (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Sara Collins (other topics)Wayétu Moore (other topics)
Our first group read of the year is She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore.
Wayétu Moore (from author's website)
Wayétu Moore is the author of She Would Be King, released in September, 2018. Her memoir, The Dragons, The Giant, The Women will also be released on June 2, 2020.
Moore is the founder of One Moore Book, a non-profit organization that creates and distributes culturally relevant books for underrepresented readers. Her first bookstore opened in Monrovia, Liberia in 2015.Her writing can be found in The Paris Review, Frieze Magazine, Guernica, The Atlantic Magazine and other publications. She has been featuredin The Economist Magazine, NPR, NBC, BET and ABC, among others, for her work in advocacy for diversity in children’s literature.
She’s a graduate of Howard University, University of Southern California and Columbia University. Moore is a founding faculty member of Randolph College MFA program and a 2019 Distinguished Visiting Writer at Syracuse University MFA.
She Would be King (British hardcover blurb)
In the west African village of Lai, red-haired Gbessa is cursed at birth and exiled on suspicion of being a witch. Bitten by a viper and left for dead, she survives to discover a new life with a group of African American settlers in the colony of Monrovia.
Then Gbessa meets two extraordinary others; June Dey – a man of unusual strength, born into slavery on a plantation in Virginia – and Norman Aragon, the child of a white British coloniser and a Maroon slave from the Blue Mountains of Jamaica, who can fade from sight at will.
Soon all three realise that they are cursed – or perhaps, uniquely gifted. Together they protect the weak and vulnerable, but only Gbessa can salvage the tense relationship between the settlers and the indigenous tribes.
There is no dedicated discussion leader this month, so please do chip in with whatever thoughts, questions, and opinions you want to share.