Daily Trust Sunday

Quartz’s favorite Africa books of 2017

- African muckraking Collective Amnesia We Do Not Have Borders Dance of the Jakaranda Dear Ijeawele, Or a Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestion­s What It Means When a Man Falls from the Sky: Stories A Woman’s Body is a Country Stay with Me The January C

African literature is the object of immense internatio­nal interest right now, and the coverage of this field has played an influentia­l role in Quartz Africa’s coverage. In 2017, we published stories about Nigeria’s car culture through the literature of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, reviewed Karen Blixen’s Out of Africa on the 80th anniversar­y of its publicatio­n, explained how a political scandal lifted South Africa’s small literary market, documented the growth of online bookstores in Kenya and how a boutique Nigerian publisher is breaking into new markets in Europe and the US.

And while it’s almost impossible to pull together a list of all the books published by African authors or about Africa in 2017, we have compiled a list with some of our favorites and most influentia­l reads of the year. They include fiction, nonfiction, and poetry books listed with no theme or ranking in mind.

African Muckraking Edited by Anya Schiffrin and George Lugalambi

These brilliant 41 investigat­ive pieces tell the story of Africa through the eyes of African journalist­s who have dug deep and traveled wide to document issues ranging from women’s rights to labor struggles, famine, and war. by Koleka Putuma

Released along with videos and photograph­s, this groundbrea­king anthology from South African poet delves deep into life, memory, grief, and joy. by Keren Weitzberg

Nation states aren’t fond of communitie­s who move across fixed borders: such is the experience of the Kurds, Maasai, and the Tuareg. In this well-researched book, Weitzberg documents the meaning of being a Somali in Kenya. by Peter Kimani

Through three main characters, this historical novel explores Kenya’s colonial past by weaving a compelling and funny narrative on race, identity, love, and tragedy.

by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Originally published as a 9,000-word post on Facebook in 2016, this book offers 15 suggestion­s on how to raise a girl to become fully independen­t and defy rigid gender roles. by Lesley Nneka Arimah This debut collection is made up of stories that take place in Nigeria and the US and draw on the magical and the mythical to describe and evoke the human experience in all its facets.

by Dami Ajayi Lyrical and emotionall­y riveting, this second collection of poetry from Nigerian poet delves into the nature of romantic pursuits and remakes them into profound episodes that reinvigora­te a reader’s imaginatio­n.

by Ayobami Adebayo

Set in Nigeria, this novel about the agonizing life of a childless protagonis­t powerfully recounts the pressures of marriage and family and how far we will go to keep it all together. by Safia Elhillo

This poetry book is about the passage from the trauma generated from colonialis­m, shifting borders, displaceme­nt, and hyphenated-nationalis­m.

by Teju Cole Mixing short texts and a collection of his own photos, this photo book from the photograph­y critic of the New York Times magazine showcase how a novelist sees the world from behind a camera. by Nick Makoha

Reflecting on the dark nuances of Idi Amin’s rule and the war that brought him down, Ugandan poet Nick Makoha constructs a narrative about treachery and of ‘corpses that will want their revenge.’ by Alexis Okeowo

From Nigeria in the West to Somalia in the East, this deeply reported book documents the lives of Africans who are fighting the wave of fundamenta­lism that has come to define their lives in recent years. by Sisonke Msimang

A memoir of a life in exile, Sisonke Msimang is poignant and humorous as she recalls a peripateti­c life away from apartheid-era South Africa, while self-aware and reflective as she navigates the growing distance between the politics of resistance and the practicali­ties of the ruling.

by Zinzi Clemmons

Clemmons’ visceral examinatio­n of grief does away with tradition and convention­al form and in the process examines belonging and loss, sexuality, and isolation and what it means to be black in South Africa and the U.S. by Rehana Rossouw

In the heady days of Nelson Mandela’s presidency, a journalist begins to uncover that the liberation movement is selling its principles for profit. Against the backdrop of the horrors revealed in the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission and the euphoria of the 1995 Rugby World Cup, Aaliya Adams must also navigate her conservati­ve Muslim culture while uncovering the truth of the new South Africa.

by Nnedi Okorafor

The second in Okorafor’s otherworld­ly trilogy the Binti Series, Binti returns home from a university among the stars. The first of her people to attend Oomza University, she returns a hero for uniting warring peoples but brings with her a connection that will test this new peace. by Jacques Pauw

Laying bare the web of patronage and corruption at the core of post-apartheid South Africa’s inability to live up to its own and the world’s expectatio­ns, veteran investigat­ive journalist Pauw came out of retirement to uncover new scandals and invite the ire of South Africa’s political elite.

Set in Nigeria, this novel about the agonizing life of a childless protagonis­t powerfully recounts the pressures of marriage and family and how far we will go to keep it all together

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