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The British Library by Yinka Shonibare MBE


Here is a place where I lovingly judge book covers. Here is also a place where I look back at some of my favourite African book covers in 2016. Like the UK edition of Helen Oyeyemi's What is Not Yours is Not Yours and the UK/Commonwealth edition of S.L Grey's The Apartment. Something about the solid background of both books and the object in the centre. I particularly love the texture and rustic nature of What is Not Yours is Not Yours - it is even more gorgeous in real life, particularly with its exposed spine.



The exposed spine ... image via Picador



Some of the covers I absolutely loved focused on aspects of bodies (particularly female bodies) from the neck up, such as full-on faces in the German edition of Nnedi Okorafor's Lagune which took my breathe away the first time I saw it - the detail, the fluidity ...  I also fell in love at first sight with Irenosen Okojie's Speak Gigantular cover. I loved the colour, the character's hair, the absence of a literal mouth. Then there's the presence of loudness in Selling Lip Service - Tammy Baikie's debut novel.  I wanted to know why the owner of the mouth was so vocal! Or maybe they weren't, but I just had to know. Both Speak Gigantular and Lip Service speak volumes!!!! I also loved the hair in Kopana Matlwa's Period Pains - to have natural hair front and centre on a book cover, particularly when it's so contested. 

Cover illustration by Greg Ruth

Cover design by James Nunn



Then there is the Chinese edition of Nnedi Okorafor's Binti. I mean look at that!!! 

Illustrated by Liu Junwe

... and the UK edition of Okorafor's Akata Witch! I am also extremely biased when it comes to this particular illustrator - Onyinye Iwu and love everything she does.


The covers I loved were also more abstract in their representation of people - from Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing to Emmanuel Iduma's The Sound of Things to Come and Chinelo Okparanta's Under the Udala Trees. 



Cover art by Victor Ehikhamenor

Cover art by Victor Ehikhamenor

Then there are the reprint issues of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's books. Again, look at them!!!
Covers designed by Jo Walker


There were even more abstract covers that stood out for me, including Safia Elhillo's Asmarani as well as Sarah Ladipo Manyika's Like a Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun - this cover makes makes me feel both happy and sad. 



I clearly also had a thing for covers with yellow in them - including Nick Mulgrew's Stations ...

Cover designed by Louis de Villiers
Stations also has illustrations by skullboy

... but give me a yellow cover which also has bodies or faces and I'm sold. Take, for instance Yewande Omotoso's The Woman Next Door ... 


 .... as well as Nick Wood's Azanian Bridges! Okay this cover is more orangey-yellow, than full on yellow, but face!



Last but certainly not the least are the covers of Fred Khumalo's #Zuptas Must Fall and other rants (okay so maybe I also had a thing for orange) and Jen Thorpe's The Peculiar - in fact it was the cover that first attracted me to the book.



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It's that time of the year when the 'Best books of [fill in year]' lists are released, and this year (as with previous years), I love to find out which African books made it on to the lists. Well, over on the NYT no African books were on the editors of of the NYT Book Review's 10 Best Books of 2016, but not to worry BuzzFeed - whose list of 24 best fiction books of 2016 is pretty awesome - cites Helen Oyeyemi's What is Not Yours is Not Yours and Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing. Canada's The Globe & Mail also lists Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing as one of their 100 best books of the year, while on the Slate, Laura Miller's 10 Favourite Books of 2016 includes Helen Oyeyemi's What is Not Yours is Not Yours. 




On the FT, Petinah Gappah makes it clear that her favourite books this year are by African authors:
Some of my favourite books this year were published by Cassava Republic ... Particularly striking was 'Like a Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun' by Sarah Ladipo Manyika, a lyrical novel about the pains and pleasures of ageing and lives well-lived. I also enjoyed Elnathan John's 'Born on a Tuesday', a sensitive coming-of-age novel set in northern Nigeria, and I loved Abubakar Adam Ibrahim's wonderful 'Season of Crimson Blossoms', an unexpected intergenerational love story set against the menacing background of political violence. Cassava Republic was also the first publisher to recognise the talents of Teju Cole, whose 'Known and Strange Things' (Faber/Random House) is my non-fiction book of the year.



Nnedi Okorafor's novella Binti and Nick Wood's debut adult novel Azanian Bridges are a couple of the Guardian's best SF and Fantasy books of 2016. 



While one of the Guardian's best fiction of 2016 is JM Coetzee's The Schooldays of Jesus. 



Clearly it's still early days and over the next couple of weeks there will be more 'best of' lists produced. While it seems like the frontrunners are Homegoing and What is Not Yours is Not Yours, it's really refreshing to see African SFF on the Guardian's Best SFF list. I eagerly await the other lists, but for now - what were some of your favourite (African) books published this year?

Update: So it turns out I didn't have to wait too long for even more lists, as in the last couple of days more have been released. So here are even more best books of 2016. 

No books by an African writer made it on to HuffPost's 18 Best Fiction Books of 2016, but
Esquire's 25 best books of 2016 also featured Homegoing and What is Not Yours is Not Yours, as well as Trevor Noah's Born a Crime and Hisham Matar's The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land in Between. Elle's 33 Best Books of 2016, also lists What is Not Yours is Not Yours and Homegoing. 




And the greatest of all lists - visually, magnitude, content, categories - comes courtesy of NPR (they may have topped themselves this year - I mean Ta-nehis Coates Black Panther is on the list). When I grow up, I want to make lists like NPR (jus' sayin'). On their list of 309 titles, includes Homegoing, What is Not Yours is Not Yours, Born a Crime, The Return and Behold the Dreamers, as well as Luvvie Ajayi's I'm Judging You and Sofia Samatar's The Winged Histories. 


... there's also Joshua Hammer's The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu (okay so not written by an African writer, but it's about bad-ass librarians from Timbuktu so it's being added to the list).

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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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