Great African Reads discussion
Welcome
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Welcome to new members!!... and introduction... if you want

Welcome, Kat! I saw you found the recommendation thread, which is a slightly better place to list them but here is fine too, since sharing one's favorite books is a great way to introduce oneself. :)
I hope you like it here!

Meanwhile, I was born in Panama many years ago but moved to the U.S. when I was 17 and have lived in New Orleans (and Baton Rouge and Lafayette), NYC (Manhattan), San Francisco and live now in a small town mid-way between San Francisco and San Jose (where I work). I was born to read.
Levirate marriage hasn't been practiced by Jews for quite some time. Though one's brother-in-law sometimes raises the idea in a more-or-less jocular fashion.

Thanks :)

thanks, Mel! so far so good although i can't seem to concentrate on much. also this is crazy: i don't ever remember having two years in a row with major hurricanes. nuts.


the rain won't quit! and then i keep expecting to lose power, so i haven't really used my time well, except for our little Downton Abbey marathon. eek...the electricity literally is flickering. i might be out of here...


Lower Manhattan is apparently flooding now...it's still raining in DC, nonstop since yesterday evening. i didn't lose my electricity...still hoping i don't lose it at all. i'm also very concerned about points north and west of here. :(
this storm is insane.

I'm a writer and policy adviser, focusing on international development, and a blogger at Global Dashboard. I'm English, based in Spain, but passionate about West Africa, having spent a year or so in total travelling and working in this fascinating but largely misunderstood region.
I've just authored The Ringtone and the Drum: Travels in the World's Poorest Countries, a travel book on Sierra Leone, Guinea-Bissau and Burkina Faso. The book tells the stories of ordinary people living in extraordinarily difficult conditions, discusses why the three countries lag so far behind the rest of the world, and recounts my often hair-raising journey. Doug Saunders, Canada Globe & Mail journalist and author of Arrival City, described it as 'a truly engaging and informative book that provides a rare tour of one of the world’s poorest and least understood regions.'
I've put up an excerpt on my author page, and there are more details, including a video, photos and a podcast reading, on the website: www.theringtoneandthedrum.net.
Would be very interested to hear what you all think of it, and in the meantime I'll continue trying to get through my backlog of Tour d'Afrique novels.



i did indeed, despite my slowness, set up a thread for Mark here so please join him there to ask questions about his work. :)

Hi Andrea - there's no rush. One thing I've learned during the process of writing and getting published is patience!

And to everybody else, I am back!!! I am so sorry to have been absent for so long, I've had a really crazy year at work and have had to leave pretty much everything to my wonderful co-mod Marieke (who's done an awesome job setting up stuff for 2013!!!!!! :D ).
Anyway, I'm just excited to be back here, chat to you guys and "travel" across Africa on our tour and other adventures again!! YAY! :D

thanks, Suzanna! honestly i could not have done it without Muphyn--even though we live on opposite ends of the earth and have never met each other in person, we totally trust one another to make decisions and give each other unconditional support so i knew i could go ahead and get things started while she was buried under piles and piles and piles of work. BUT I'M SO GLAD SHE IS BACK WITH US!! because: not only is she ten times more organized than me, she is FUN. XD

thanks, Suzanna! honestly i could not have done it without Muphyn--even though we live on opposite ends of ..."
*LAUGH* You are so ridiculous, Marieke!! :D (You're very sweet, thank you :) Haha, me being organised... some people think I've lost that... :)
How on earth have I been able to survive without you guys??!! I seriously have missed you all (thanks Suzanna! :D). So glad to be back. :D


yes! we have been a little slow the past couple of months, but things are kicking into gear for 2013. we have two projects happening at this group. One focuses on contemporary African writers and in January we will be reading the short story collection of Uwem Akpan Say You're One of Them.
And then we have a "tour" and we will be visiting six countries in 2013. We'll be reading Over the Lip of the World: Among the Storytellers of Madagascar for Madagascar in January and discussing it in February. I hope you find things that are interesting to you! :)

"The Street Boy" by Ibrahim Oumarr Jalloh. It's not yet on Goodreads but it is on Amazon. I have sent a message to the author to add it on Goodreads. I just finished it. My review is here: http://www.amazon.com/review/edit-rev....



Hi Chinook! Very happy to have you more active around here.
Welcome Paul! i hope you will jump in frequently.


Welcome, Buffy! i think you've come to the right place. :)

Marieke, good point about capturing future recommendations, I'll organise something!





What a great project to have, Vered! You should definitely check our contemporary literature project from last year and this year (this year we are focusing on genre writing). You should also stop in at the author threads...we have several active authors here who will likely be interested in chatting with you.

My name is Sally and I am an Australian. I lived in Nigeria from the age of 6 months until my parents were recalled to England and then moved to The Gambia for a few years. We moved to Australia in the 1970s.
I love books set in Nigeria, or written my Nigerian authors - but read books set all over Africa.
I am hoping this group will help me to add to my African reading repertoire

My name is Sally and I am an Australian. I lived in Nigeria from the age of 6 months until my parents were recalled to England and then moved to The Gambia for a few years. We moved to ..."
Hi Sally, I am Bajen and I am from The Gambia and I am currently living there as well:)

So cool - hi Bajen - nice to meet you :)
Have many wonderful memories of The Gambia - was only there for 2 years, and I was mostly at boarding school in England - but my term breaks were there. I was 12 when we left there for good.
I read a book a while back set in The Gambia
Our Grandmothers' Drums by Mark Hudson and there was a more modern one more recently only the title escapes me. Always up for more suggestions :)

So cool - hi Bajen - nice to meet you :)
Have many wonderful memories of The Gambia - wa..."
I have never heard of it but I will definitely check it out.

i've got some ideas for future projects, but if anyone has an idea of something they'd like to see here, please tell me or Muphyn.


I Mary. African Lit. blogger. www.maryokekereviews.blogspot.com
Please feel free to visit, join, leave comments.
Thanks.

I Mary. African Lit. blogger. www.maryokekereviews.blogspot.com
Please feel free to visit, join, leave comments.
Thanks."
Mary - I love your blog - what a great source of African books. I have added a few must reads to my wish list :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Shadow King (other topics)The Moor's Account (other topics)
Half of a Yellow Sun (other topics)
Huit leçons sur l'Afrique (other topics)
Africana: Viaggio nella storia letteraria del Continente (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Tsitsi Dangarembga (other topics)Irene Muchemi-Ndiritu (other topics)
Khadija Abdalla Bajaber (other topics)
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (other topics)
Yefon Isabelle (other topics)
More...
Thats really interesting. I never knew that.