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#BookChaser: Sidi’s 93 poems are an art historian’s dream collection

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Here, there’s Art History and there’s poetry, all wrapped in a culture entirely of the author’s creation.

Nathaniel Bivan

My first major encounter with Umar Abubakar Sidi was when his book, a collection of poetry published in 2019 by Konya Shamsrumi, sat on my office desk bearing a title I found uncomfortable. “These poets and their titles’, I thought. “Which one is ‘The Poet of Dust’ again?” But then I thought about creation and what this Sidi’s ‘Dust’ could be implying – “what if he’s trying to say the first man was a poet and made from dust?” I sat forward and started reading.

It’s 2022 and here I am again. This time I am scrolling through news feeds on social media and the words ‘Like Butterflies Scattered About by Art Rascals’ keep appearing. And yes, it’s Sidi again. And yes, with another uncomfortable title. Fast-forward to the near future and my copy arrives, properly sealed like I didn’t already know an army of rascals and their rascality would invade my home.

You see, there are two types of art rascals (in my opinion inspired by Sidi’s latest offering) – those who write about issues with passion and those who write like they are in a trance. Sidi falls in the latter category.

You see, there are two types of art rascals (in my opinion inspired by Sidi’s latest offering) – those who write about issues with passion and those who write like they are in a trance. Sidi falls in the latter category. As I read ‘Like Butterflies Scattered About by Art Rascals’ I pictured the poet on a spirit journey where he inhabits places he has been to, those he hasn’t been to, those yet travelled or places he would never will visit. I imagine him with a featherlike pen writing about his journeys and telling us histories of cities or villages or worlds we have never been to. Well, not in the way he has, anyway.

More than many poets, and I say this with all honesty, Sidi took me to school while I read his work of 93 poems. Take the piece ‘The Meaning of Guernica’, for example, where he writes about the “Horrific devastation in the Basque town of Guernica.” And so, I pick up my phone and go to Google where I learn about a 1937 painting by the legendary artist Pablo Picasso called ‘Guernica’.  It’s described as one of, if not the most famous work of Picasso probably because of its powerful political statement at the time. Painted in reaction to “the Nazi’s devastating casual bombing practice on the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War” of 17 July 1936 to 1 April 1939.

But don’t be fooled. This poet is most likely pointing at future wars (and the tragedy of it all) beyond those in history books. He could be talking about a smeared attempt at democracy. And he could be talking about a war of the mind. Of Boko Haram or ISWAP or ISIS and its largescale human tragedy. The possibilities are endless! Good luck with your own interpretation. I’ve attempted mine.

If you doubt my effort at unraveling this poet, read ‘The Bawdy Quatrians of Abu Nuwas’, and yes, maybe visit a search engine on your phone or computer. I recommend we go back to this book’s title and begin to connect the dots that don’t need connecting any further, really. Sidi might as well have dedicated this collection to artists across the globe.

Encyclopedia.com describes Abu Nuwas as “the most famous Arab poet of the Abbasid era.” It didn’t stop there but describes his style as “extravagant, and his compositions reflected well the licentious manners of the upper class of his day”.

So, ladies and gentlemen, we are reading a poet and a historian of the arts, all in one, here. What Sidi attempts in his lines is to showcase the uniqueness (rascality if you like) of various artists by analysing their works and at the same time rewriting history in his own words. Genius if you ask me and, yet, possibly not for the everyday poetry fan.

I have thought about this since ‘The Poet of Dust’ and will dare to say it now. Sidi doesn’t write for readers. He writes for poetry. And since he writes for poetry, poetry lives through him in a most profound manner.

I have thought about this since ‘The Poet of Dust’ and will dare to say it now. Sidi doesn’t write for readers. He writes for poetry. And since he writes for poetry, poetry lives through him in a most profound manner.

But this isn’t all. There’s more – like his ‘A Surrealist Interpretation of Rastafarian Painting & Jazz or Definition of an Idealist Rascal’. When last have you read such a long title? It’s said that one needs to know the rules in art before he can break them. I’m personally not sure there are still rules in poetry anymore.

In ‘Concerning Celebs’, Sidi has time for what I’ll call “the conventional”, in this case. Or so it seems until I begin to read:

This extraordinary being

is a professor who suggests a phallic reading of Celebs

to poets who want to experience the fullness of the movement

the image is that of a mechanical elephant

the image was painted in Cologne

the glowing colours, may seem highly formalistic

like reference to life lived in the body

the style draws together text & smoke

For this Sidi’s matter, I rest my case, as I leave you to read the entire collection and judge for yourself.

BOOKS

#BookChaser: Why I hated reading Iruesiri Samson’s ‘Devil’s Pawn’

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Nathaniel Bivan

I hated reading Devil’s Pawn, and you probably would if you were male. I mean, the male genital was mentioned, probably a hundred times and I kept shivering at the prospect of yet another victim of Simon, the genital hunter, cutting off another. But, you see, Simon’s hunt doesn’t begin without reason. This reason was a bloody crime that made me cringe and almost scream, yes! That the culprits deserve it. But before you wonder what I am rambling about, let me give you some background to this crime thriller that made me think of Agatha Christie and James Hadley Chase, all at once.

When the Black Cats, a university cult group, headed by Emeka decided to punish Ese for refusing the latter’s advances, they never envisioned the bloodier outcome. Yes, they gang-raped her before they murdered her (well, technically, Simon was forced to do it). But little did they know that this wild move would mark them all for hell, one by one, in the most shocking manner.

Now, for me, this is what made me fall in love with the novel – the twist. From a should-have-been cult story to a ‘Hammer House of Horror’ episode where all those involved in Ese’s death are marked for death. Obviously, the author, Kukogho Iruesiri Samson, who won the 2018 Dusty Manuscript Prize for this work is a writer who pays attention to detail. This is evident all through. Published in 2020, I would have normally read this book in the same year, but doing it now, in a way, makes the suspense even more worthwhile. And I am glad I finally did.

Again, twists in plots have always been my thing because I’m not too fond of this ability to know what would come next in the best of stories. So, when I fail to spot the direction, it’s always a joy for me. If I am to venture into the author’s mind a little, I am almost certain the advocation for the castration of rapists at a time in Nigeria inspired this twist. I mean, what better way to illustrate déjà vu than to have one of the culprits be the dead victim’s cutting tool?

I have heard some writers like Toni Kan say in a panel discussion (this was at the Kaduna Book and Arts Festival some years back) that he doesn’t write to pass across a message. But just like I see the scary warning given to rapists in ‘Devil’s Pawn’, I see different messages in practically every work of fiction. For me, the message, whether consciously thought out or not, is what drives the writer, and maybe even the narrative.

Let me give an example: If we are to go out and be all moral about this, even a story that’s characterized as erotica has a purpose. And if the aim is to appeal to readers who appreciate graphic sex, then yes, that’s the message. Every character has a purpose in a work of art, and with this purpose rises a message, whether clear or not, whether a turn-off to some or a joy to others. Samson’s debut novel has the capacity to scare the devil out of any rapist, particularly in this part of Africa where superstitious beliefs are upheld by some.

One thing, though that ‘Devil’s Pawn’ lacks, is excellent proofreading. The editing is excellent, but an equally excellent proofreader would have cleared numerous typos. But still, who says a good book is that which is rid of typos? The best, for me, are those stories that have staying power, driven by suspense and empathy. And this brilliant novel has both.

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#AkumbuReviews: Children of the Quicksands by Efua Traoré

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Our reviewer takes a look at a book that weaves old-school folktale-telling and contemporary themes for a story unlike any other on the bookshelves today.

Akumbu Uche

A few months ago, I was surprised to learn that a young friend had never heard about the NTA children’s programme, ‘Tales by Moonlight’. Growing up in the nineties, no Sunday evening was complete without switching on the TV to watch Aunty Nkem (Pastor Nkem Oselloka-Orakwue), the show’s host, gather a gaggle of children underneath a tree and regale them with folktales. As I worried aloud that my friend had been starved of what I considered a childhood staple and bemoaned how Nigerian society had lost a vital means of transferring cultural values and mores, I suddenly wondered what my parents and grandparents who, in their youth, had experienced the real, authentic moonlit tales in their villages, must have made of my own mediated and somewhat diluted experience. 

Reading ‘Children of the Quicksands’ (Masobe Books, 2022) by Efua Traoré reminded me of this incident and reassured me that all is not lost; there are still avenues where today’s young people can enjoy learning about the same myths and folklore I grew up on. 

The middle-grade novel opens as thirteen-year-old Simi is dispatched to her maternal village, Ajao, to spend the holiday with Iya, her grandmother. Her mother has had to leave for a work trip abroad and can’t take her along. Thanks to a long-running family feud, Simi and Iya are strangers to each other. To make matters worse, Simi is an aje butter. City living, coupled with her mother’s helicopter parenting, has ill-prepared her for building a fire, cleaning ofada rice, or hand-washing clothes at the stream, skills that her village-raised peers take for granted. Fortunately, Simi finds new friends in Jay, the Oba’s cool and fashion-forward son, and Bubu, a shy girl who, in her rare talkative moments, tells stories about bush babies and pythons spiriting erring villagers away at night; and she soon learns to adapt to rural life. 

However, bush babies and pythons aren’t the only dangers lurking in Ajao. In the middle of the forest is a forbidden lake reputed to be a portal to a netherworld and responsible for the disappearance of several children.

However, bush babies and pythons aren’t the only dangers lurking in Ajao. In the middle of the forest is a forbidden lake reputed to be a portal to a netherworld and responsible for the disappearance of several children. Simi accidentally discovers that she is the only one who can go in and out of the lake, unscathed; a power that may very well be related to Iya’s vocation as a priestess to the goddess Oshun. But while she is still figuring out this secret magical ability and its implications, she and her friends discover the townspeople’s plans to landfill the lake; a move that could have devastating consequences. Intended or not, I couldn’t help but see parallels between this subplot and the recent controversy surrounding the pollution of Nigeria’s sacred Osun river due to mining activities. For parents and educators, this could open up a great way of engaging young readers in discussions on ecological conservation and environmental justice issues. 

The backstory about how the goddess Oshun created the quicksands – a netherworld between the land of the living and the land of the dead – which then sets off the chain of events in this tale is an intriguing one. Traoré does an excellent job blending preexisting folklore with her own original inventions, making the story all her own and making it easy to see why she won the Times/Chicken House Children’s Fiction Competition in 2019, a winning streak that began a year earlier, when she won the 2018 Commonwealth Africa prize with her short story, ‘True Happiness.’ Her grasp of dialogue is excellent too. Each character has their own distinct speech pattern; a detail which she employs to flesh out supporting characters whose treatment could have felt tropey and cliched in the hands of a less confident writer. 

Each character has their own distinct speech pattern; a detail which she employs to flesh out supporting characters whose treatment could have felt tropey and cliched in the hands of a less confident writer. 

‘Children of the Quicksands’ may be billed as fantasy and magical realism, but the novel demonstrates that the traditional African worldview treats the supernatural as an extension of reality, and the author goes to great lengths to show that the Yoruba Ifásystemis not just a set of superstitious beliefs but a legitimate faith with its own logic. Of this, only a few may be persuaded because, as Joseph Campbell observed in his seminal work, ‘The Power of Myth’, the hard facts of one religion are likely to be dismissed as myths by another. However, myths offer universal messages, and in a time when there is increased antagonism between adherents of adopted Abrahamic faiths and those of African traditional religions, the novel’s subtle but emphatic stress on religious tolerance and peaceful coexistence is a timely message. 

With other themes like familial relationships, reconciliation, and bravery, the novel covers a lot of moral ground and offers impressionable minds many valuable lessons. Much like an onion being peeled, ‘Children of the Quicksands’ guarantees the discovery of a new layer each time it’s reread. 

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GeekAfrique’s Writer of the Year: Nnedi Okorafor

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Starting with a small handful of sci-fi and fantasy short stories and novellas, Nnedi Okorafor’s legend and bibliography have grown. With many successful books, the Nigerian-American writer’s work continues to attract readers to Africanfuturism, a fast-growing subgenre. And with a well-received foray into comic books for Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, and even IDW, she has cemented her place in the collective hearts of geekdom.

Spaceships, terrorist aliens, water spirits, soldiers, Boko Haram, and wet piles of meat. These aren’t part of a kind of dark poetry but are mainstays of some of Okorafor’s best work. Her work in Africanfuturism (one word, no space), speculative fiction, and fantasy work are among the most striking today.

Africanfuturism, which Okorafor coined, is an exciting subgenre that welds science fiction and technology to African mythologies, weaving black people —or blackness, really— into fertile worlds rife with story possibilities.

For past achievements and a stellar presence on bookshelves this year, Okorafor is GeekAfrique’s Writer of the Year.

In January 2022, Okorafor’s ‘Akata Woman’, the third novel in the Nsibidi Scripts Series was released and swiftly debuted on The New York Times Best Seller list. This installment continues a story that subverts tropes in a deep and thoughtful way while being fun and accessible. There’s a good number of her books out now, including the heartfelt YA ‘Ikenga’, the striking Africanfuturist ‘Remote Control’, the absolutely brilliant ‘Noor’, and a new hardcover collection of her Hugo and Eisner-winning LaGuardia graphic novel (Dark Horse) with constant collaborator Tana Ford. For past achievements and a stellar presence on bookshelves this year, Okorafor is GeekAfrique’s Writer of the Year.

In the past, Okorafor’s ‘Binti’ has won both the 2016 Nebula Award, and 2016 Hugo Award for Best Novella, while ‘Who Fears Death’, which won the 2011 World Fantasy Award for Best Novel, is being turned into a highly-anticipated HBO series, adapted by ‘Game Of Thrones’ writer George R.R Martin. She has a breath-taking oeuvre of work and is making a transition to TV pretty well, with several projects being developed at the same time.

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