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Danfos (commercial minibuses) in Lagos. 2011.
October is Naija lit month - my way of celebrating our month of Independence - and this year I'm going to get a little personal with my posts, which will be inspired by some aspects of my Nigerian identity - like where I was born.

Last year one of my posts paid homage to the city where I was born and raised. And for my first celebratory post I would like to showcase more works from Lagos.  In the last post, I focused only on books on Lagos that I owned, but now I want to go beyond my library and look more broadly at what is out there - as long as they spend all or at least a substantial amount of time in Lagos. I also wanted to look at books that have been published in the last couple of years.

So here are 5 recent books and be it the slums, a futuristic version of the city or an alien invasion, they all have one thing in common - they bring us Lagos. Through them we learn about Bar Beach, the 'joys' of go-slow and being a returnee in cosmopolitan Lagos. As always, this isn't an extensive list, but more of a glimpse at what is out there. 

1. Looking for Transwonderland: Travels in Nigeria by Noo Saro-Wiwa (2012) 
Although not solely set in Lagos (Noo Saro-Wiwa traves to nearly every country in Nigeria), her journey does begin in "The Centre of Excellence", Lagos - a place that greets you with a simple sign: 'This is Lagos' - take it or leave it. As Saro-Wiwa explains:

'If Lagos were a person, she would wear a Gucci jacket and a cheap hair weave, with a mobile phone in one hand, a second set in her back pocket, and the mother of all scowls on her face. She would usher you impatiently through her front door at an extortionate price before smacking you to the floor for taking too long about it. "This," she would growl while searching your pockets for more cash, "is Lagos."' 

And after travelling all over Nigeria, it also ends in Lagos, with Saro-Wiwa now 'inured to Lagos's incomprehensibilities and chaos'.

2. Americanah (2013) by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
As teenagers in a Lagos secondary school, Ifemelu and Obinze fall in love. Nigeria is under military dictatorship and people are leaving the country if they can. Ifemelu departs to America to study. She suffers defeats and triumphs, finds and loses relationships and friends, all the while feeling the weight of something she never thought back home: race. Obinze had hoped to join her, but post-9/11 America will not let him in, and he plunges into a dangerous, undocumented life in London. Years later, Obinze is a wealthy man in a newly democratic Nigeria, while Ifemelu has achieved success as a writer of an eye-opening blog about race in America. But when Ifemelu returns to Lagos, and she and Obinze reignite their shared passion - for their homeland and each other - they will face the toughest decision of their lives.


3. Lagos 2060 (2013) edited by Ayodele Arigbabu
What will it be like to live in Lagos 100 years after Nigeria gained independence from the British? In 2010, eight writers came together to contribute stories to an anthology on fictional/futuristic takes on the city of Lagos via a workshop tagged LAGOS_2060, conceived to commemorate Nigeria's golden jubilee. The anthology that grew out of the workshop is telling in the different versions of the future it foretells. In LAGOS_2060 - there are climate change induced natural disasters actively plugged by doomsday preachers of the day,  there are serious government institutions involved in first rate science and more often than not, these institutions tackle and solve the energy crisis to various degrees of success. There are wars and near wars as Lagos threatens to secede from the Nigerian state to have full control of its own economy. There are robots, amphibious speed trains, psychedelic drugs and highly trained security operatives with conflicts of interest,  but more importantly, there are ubiquitous Lagos people, whose industry and inventiveness seems largely unchanged, despite how much has travailed in the intervening half century. 


4. Lagoon (2014) by Nnedi Okorafor
In Lagoon, three strangers meet on Bar Beach in Lagos - a marine biologist with a tumultuous marriage, a rap star trying to find quiet and a soldier desperate to contact his family. Each is there searching for solace, each with her or his distinct, complicated life. But this evening the sea is uneasy and the strangers find themselves bound together when a spaceship crashes off the coast of Lagos. This strange encounter changes each of them unequivocally, and sets them on a path to save the city. 

5. Into the Go Slow - Bridgett M. Davis (2014)

In 1987 Detroit, twenty-one year old Angie passes time working in a mall and watching sitcoms with her mom. But beneath the surface, she is consumed by thoughts of her sister's death years earlier in Nigeria. Ella had introduced Angie to Black Power and a vision of returning to Africa. On impulse, Angie travels to Lagos and begins to retrace Ella's steps. Against a backdrop of the city's infamous go-slow - traffic as wild and unpredictable as a Fela lyric - she uncovers some harsh truths. For anyone who has wished to be of a different era, this book captures the pain of living vicariously and the exhilaration of finding yourself. 

22:50 No Comments
If you're a book lover and based in Lagos, there's a new book club just for you:

"The Lagos Book Club is a free club catering to young women living in Lagos and those who have moved back to Lagos after living outside the country. The main criteria: be open to discussions and like good books".

April's book is Looking for Transwonderland: Travels in Nigeria, a travel memoir by Noo Saro-Wiwa. It was published in 2012 by Granta. It was named one of the 10 best contemporary African books by the Guardian in 2012, chosen by the Financial Times Life & Arts as one of their Pick of the Crop and also by the Sunday Times as Travel Book of the Year 2012. It can be found in most major bookstores in Lagos.

Noo Saro-Wiwa was born in Nigerian in 1976 and raised in England. She has written travel guides for Rough Guide and Lonely Planet.

The first meeting is scheduled for Saturday April 27th. Venue, TBC, but it'll be in a cafe on Lagos Island. If you're interested in joining do send an email to lagosbookclub@gmail.com for more details and to also reserve a spot. 

What's there not to love? A place where book lovers can meet, share their interests and discuss books. And it's free :). If I was in Lagos, I'd definitely be there. So send an email, get a copy of the book (if you haven't already read it, it's a great book) and enjoy!!!
14:45 1 Comments
It's been another great year of African literature. Sefi Atta, Nadine Gordimer, Chuma Nwokolo, and Ahdaf Souief were some of the authors that returned with new works. There were debuts from Emmanuel Iduma,Yejide Kilanko, Sue Nyathi, Chibundu Onuzo, and Tolulope Popoola to name a few; anthologies from Caine Prize and NaijaStories; and the much awaited memoir from Chinua Achebe, as well as memoirs from Ngugi wa Thiong'o and former Vice President (and now President) of Ghana, John Dramani Mahama. And there's also the wealth of African publishers bringing us even more amazing books.


Some 2012 books I'm dying to read  Some 2012 books I was able to read

While I wasn't able to read all the books that were published this year, I was fortunate enough to read some, and I figured I couldn't end this year of reading without my very own "Best Of" list. 

I am constantly making lists, but this is my first ever "Best Of" list, and it was much harder than I thought to choose my favourite books of the year. I initially started off thinking I would chose three books, but it was much harder than I thought to do that. In the end I decided to pick my five favourite books that were published in 2012 - and even that was hard. I nearly made it a top seven (there were a couple more books I wanted to add), but in the end I held my ground, and stuck to five. Well, here they are in no particular order:


Absolutely loving these books was definitely one of the reasons they made my top five, but I also think it's their difference that made me choose them in the end. These indeed are very different books, but I guess that's why I loved them. To me they represent the diversity of contemporary African literarature. 

Chika Unigwe's Night Dancer portrays three very different women's complex lives in a patriarchal society excellently; AfroSF shows the possibility of Science Fiction as a literary genre in Africa; after spending a month reading his translated novels Alain Mabancknou can do no wrong in my eyes, and Black Bazaar (which thankfully was translated into English this year) took me to the world of African immigrants in Paris; I found Looking for Trasnwonderland by Noo Saro-Wiwa refreshing and honest, especially after a not-so-good experience with another travel guide on Nigeria; and Fine Boys, what more can I say that I haven't already said - beautifully written and authentically and unapologetically Nigerian.  

So these are mine but what were your favourite books of 2012? I would really love to know. 
12:04 2 Comments

It’s rare to find a travel book on Nigeria – that’s purely because Nigeria really doesn’t have a tourist industry, and people are constantly being warned against visiting Nigeria. I have to say I did read one travel guide on Nigeria, the summer of 2011 when I went to Northern Nigeria and worked as a researcher on a maternal health project. One of my colleagues came with a travel guide and having never read anything travel guide related on Nigeria, I decided to give it a go. I read most of it before I got frustrated at the way the writer painted Nigeria - the greatest thing about Nigeria is the people (and nothing else), the Agama lizard is the only form of wildlife. So I went into Looking for Transwonderland: Travels in Nigeria hoping for a more rounded description of Nigeria.

Born in Nigeria and raised in England, Noo Saro-Wiwa, the daughter of Ken Saro-Wiwa, is a travel guide writer. While she has written several travel guides for both Rough Guide and Lonely Planet, she never wanted to write a travel guide on the country that killed her father. Recently, she decided to come to terms with Nigeria and travel around the country. Looking for Transwonderland is a very honest account of Noo Saro-Wiwa’s travels around Nigeria as an adult. From Lagos to Ibadan, Abuja to Kano, Yankari to Jos and Maiduguri, Calabar to Cross Rivers State, Benin to Port Harcourt, and then back to Lagos, we get to see the great diversity of Nigeria through her eyes.
In Looking for Transwonderland, Noo Saro-Wiwa touches on many issues: Nollywood, corruption, Nigeria’s history of slavery, politics, and our obsession with religion. Her depiction of religion in Nigeria was spot on: 



‘If there’s a country more religious than Nigeria then I haven’t been there. According to the Bible, God made the earth in six days and took a rest on the seventh. But by creating Nigerians, he ensured that that was the last day off he’s enjoyed ever since. Twenty-four hours a day and seven days a week we call on his services, connecting with him, singing his praise, establishing dialogue with him (and extremely loud dialogue at that). In my time in Lagos I had heard hairdressers singing their hallelujahs at salons; evangelical radio stations resounding in internet cafes; bus passengers collectively breaking out into ovine choruses of “Jeezos is my father… he never, never fail me”.’


And when she wrote about the messages in the ‘Lonelyhearts’, ‘Friendships’ and ‘Relationships’ pages of the Sunday newspapers, as well as the ‘Sugar Cares’, section where men are looking for sugar mummies, I really laughed.

Not many people from outside Nigeria travel around the country, and Nigeria has never been painted as a tourist destination, yet Saro-Wiwa portrays Nigeria as it is.  That is one of the things I loved about Looking for Transwonderland. Noo Saro-Wiwa has a gift for not only spotting it all – the sights, the sounds, and craziness of Nigeria – but also recreating all that she sees on paper. Yes, she shows the not-so-pretty parts of Nigeria, but she also shows the beauty and diversity, and she does it in a very humourous way. While this is in part travel guide, it is also part memoir as Looking for Transwonderland is also about Saro-Wiwa’s attempt to get to know Nigeria.
I was initially unsure if Looking for Transwonderland would showcase anything new about the country to Nigerians. But as I read I thought that if you’ve lived (or visited) some parts of Nigeria, you will definitely be able to relate – I’ve travelled around Northern Nigeria and so could relate to those sections. If you haven't been to certain parts of the country – I’ve never been to Calabar, Cross Rivers, Benin and Port Harcourt – you might be able to learn something new, or at least travel to those places through the pages of the book. For those who know very little about Nigeria this book will actually provide excellent insight to the country.
Nigeria isn’t a tourist destination but in Looking for Transwonderland, Noo Saro-Wiwa bravely travels around the country to create a travel guide, and at the same time, make sense of the country. This is a very humorous travel memoir, which I would recommend. In fact as I read it, just as I felt when I was reading Teju Cole’s ‘Everyday is for the Thief’, ‘Looking for Transwonderland’ would be a great novel to get a first-time visitor to Nigeria to read. 

3.75 out of 5
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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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