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I had no idea where to begin with As The Crow Flies by Véronique Tadjo as I have very mixed feelings towards it. I'm going to be honest and say I'm not even sure if I understood it, and wondered if I should give it a second reading. In the end I decided against that, and felt that I would probably try and read it again at a later stage in my life. Maybe then, it would make more sense.  Instead, I'm going to try and give my interpretation of it, and if anyone out there has read As The Crow Flies, I would love to know your thoughts. So here it goes.

"If you want to love
Do so
To the ends of the earth
With no shortcuts
Do so
As the crow flies

Indeed I too would have loved to write one of those serene stories with a beginning and an end. As you know only too well, it is never like that, though. Lives mingle, people tame one another and part. Destinies are lost"

And so it begins. Published in French in 1986 as A vol d'osieau and translated into English by WangÅ©i wa Goro in 2001, As The Crow Flies includes 92 vignettes. It doesn't tell one story, but many stories and like a crow, the book swoops in at different times and places in random individual lives, only for a brief moment, to capture some aspect of their lives and particularly loves. But we don't know their names, or really who they are.

There is one common story though, which comes and goes throughout - that of a woman in love, who had an affair with a married man whose wife then found out. He is no longer in her life and she is dealing with that love loss. Other than that, there are various stories told in the first, second and third person, which I felt was also in some way about love - love for someone, love for a country, love for a city, the presence or absence of love. It took me some time to get into it, and also to get into the pattern of what was going on. And as there was the one story of the woman who had the affair, it also took me a while to figure out when a new character came in and if it was her, or someone else.

I read this a couple of weeks ago and I'm still trying to decide how I feel about it. It wasn't a bad book, far from it, but I do think with As The Crow Flies you might either get it or not, and you might either love it or not.  It's also quite random, and if you're expecting structure, there isn't much of that in this. And I am torn, because while I (think) I might have got it, and actually appreciated the randomness of it, I am not sure that I loved it. Which is also why I feel I need a second reading. 

So I still have very mixed feelings towards As the Crow Flies and would really love to know what others who might have read this think of it, and also if I've actually understood this book properly.

3.75 out of 5
16:31 2 Comments

I'm not sure how many people out there loved the movie Scott Pilgrim vs the World, but I was one of them. I mean I love Michael Cera (and everything he has been in - from Arrested Development to Youth in Revolt and I can't wait for The End of the World) and I also love the director Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead is still one of my favourite movies ever. I also really liked Hot Fuzz). So when I was gifted the first 5 volumes of the Scott Pilgrim graphic novels I was super excited. I've just finished volume 2, and it's even better than the movie. As much as I would love to talk about how amazing Scott Pilgrim is, this post isn't about that. It's about what it got me thinking about while I was reading it - African Graphic novels. 

In January 2011, Geoff Ryman wrote an article on African Graphic Novels in which he looked at mainly Francophone Africa Graphic Novels and commented on the fact that "writing and illustration ... is often of the very highest quality". Interesting article to read, but if I had to choose a one stop guide to all things African graphic novels/comics, it would be bombasticelement. As a secret graphic novel/comic book lover (not-so-secret anymore), the wealth of information on African comics it provides is amazing. Here's an article on African Comics by A Bombastic Element, and this wonderful list of African comics from 1970s to 2010 - An English Reader's List of African Comics by Bombastic Element. As for African Graphic Novels, here are a few I'd like to read. 

Metro is Magdy El Shafee's first graphic novel and was translated by Chip Rossetti. Set in Cairo, it tells the story of a bank robbery and two friend's in Mubarak's corrupt, oppressive Egypt. Metro was published in Egypt in 2008, but was banned on publication in Egypt in 2008 for "offending public morals". 

Aya de Yopougon by Ivorian author Marguerite Abouet is a graphic novel I've been wanting to read for the longest time. Set in Ivory Coast in 1978, Aya tells the story of its nineteen-year old heroin, the studious and clear sighted Aya, her easy going friends Adjoua and Bintou, and their meddling relatives and neighbours. There are 6 volume's in total, but that's in French. For English speakers there are only 3 translated volumes, but you can read excerpts here and here.  I really might need to learn French.


This I want to read because DRC Congo seems a country with a number of African comics/graphic novels. In fact the BBC wrote an article on comics from Kinshasha. Congo 50  brings together 8 Congolese artists depicting the history of the country since gaining independence in 1960. All 8 artists were asked to draw the lives of twins, Dipenda and Lipenda, who were born on Independence Day. Through 8 stories, the book follows the twins lives on Congo's turbulent journey.

June 12: The Struggle for Power in Nigeria by Abraham Oshoko is one I'm curious to read. June 12, 1993 is quite a significant date in Nigerian history. On that day, Nigerians elected a new president after a decade of military rule. The election was said to be free and fair, yet less than a week later, a powerful conspiracy to abort the transfer of power began to unfold. June 12 touches on much of the fact and fiction related to this turbulent period in Nigeria's history. I am curious to see how the June 12 Presidential election is translated into a graphic novel.
Francophone Africa clearly dominates this genre and a few that make me go, "Why can't I speak French" include the Eva K (a political trilogy) and Mandrill series, which were both collaborations between Congolese (DRC) comic writer and artist Barly Barutti and French comic writer, Frank Giroud. There's also the two-part graphic novel by Patrick Masioni (also Congolese) on the 1994 Rwandan genocide - Descente en enfer and Le camp de la vie. The DRC really does produce a lot of comics/graphic novels. Another one I'd really love to read is La vie de Pahe by Gabonese comic, Patrick Essono. In La vie de Pahe, Patrick shares his experiences as a boy growing up in a traditional African society. I did find a preview here in English, but if I am honest, I'm not even sure if it's available in English. Would be great if they all were.

Also definitely check out Vusamazulu  Comix to read excerpts of MA: An African Epic, part of the Tree of Life Trilogy.
21:44 1 Comments
'Allah is not obliged to be fair about all things he does on here on earth'.


Published in French as Allah n'est pas obligé in 2000 and translated in 2006 by Frank Wynne, Allah Is Not Obliged tells the story of Birahima, an orphan who becomes a child soldier while he travels to Liberia to find his aunt. 


Set in the nineties in the middle of the civil wars in Liberia and Sierra Leonne, Birahima is one foul-mouthed 10 (or 12) year old who explains French, African and pidgin words using the dictionaries he inherited.  Through his story we meet dictators, warlords, thieves, grigrimen, and child soldiers.  Child soldiers,  the prized possessions of warlords, are armed with their AK-47s 'kalashes', drugged up with hashish and protected by prayers.


We not only read Birahima's experience as a child soldier, in his writing, Kourouma also gives us a short history of the dictators and the events that led to the civil wars in Liberia and Sierra Leonne. Allah is Not Obliged, Kourouma's last novel, raises important questions about corruption, West African dictators, civil wars, child soldiers, and the innocent people that get affected by these wars. 


4.5 out of 5 stars.



12:19 No Comments
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Founded in 2011, bookshy represents two things: the young me who was so shy I escaped through books, and the older me whose shelf is always one book shy of being full.

bookshy is a space where I celebrate, promote and recognise contemporary African literature - although sometimes I go back in time to commemorate the greats. It is about the books I love, the books I have read and the books that I am dying to read.

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