Daily Trust Sunday

Cassava Republic wants to broaden your understand­ing of African literature

Meet the small Nigerian press with its sights set on the world

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Most people would spike an idea if the business plan revealed negative numbers year after year. But Bibi Bakare-Yusuf is not most people. With precisely no entreprene­urial experience, she ignored the numbers, she says, “because I’m not a business woman” and, in 2006, launched Cassava Republic, a boutique publishing firm headquarte­red in Nigeria’s capital city of Abuja.

“Let’s just start . . . we’ll make the numbers add up somehow,” she said, rememberin­g the decision to heed her instincts rather than the balance sheet. It’s a risk that paid off. Now the numbers tell a different story: Cassava-referring to the relatively affordable but nutritious crop grown in West Africa-has published 33 authors and 52 titles across literary fiction, crime fiction, romance and children’s books. And this spring the company that introduced the world to writers such as Teju Cole and Elnathan John began selling its titles in bookstores across the US through a distributo­r.

The idea of starting a publishing firm dedicated to African literature came to Bakare-Yusuf when she traveled to Nigeria as a visiting academic from the UK. She was shocked by the narrow range of literature in the bookshops and the non-existent libraries in the homes she visited. “Books were not part of people’s conversati­ons,” said the 47-year-old Nigerian native who moved to England at age 13. And when the Nigerians she encountere­d did mention books, they were what she calls “airport fiction.”

What’s more, only one local publisher was pushing African literary fiction in Nigeria at a time contempora­ry Nigerian writers like Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Helon Habila were making waves in the literary world-the first winning the Commonweal­th First Book Prize in 2005 and the second earning the Caine Prize for African Writing in 2001.

Galvanized by what she’d seen, Bakare-Yusuf approached entreprene­urs she thought would be interested in publishing African literary fiction. None were. So she and her partner, Jeremy Weates, invested their own money and refinanced their home in the UK. Bakare-Yusuf had also quit her job to devote herself full time to the fledgling venture.

“Bibi probably never imagined ... that she would become a publisher of an African company that now has a footprint around the world,” Weates remarked, adding that she’s the “tenacious center” of their 11-year-old business. “It has become her life’s work.”

That work is predicated on the belief that having Africans write their own stories isn’t enoughthey also need access to the means of production, since editorial and marketing decisions influence how African narratives get shaped and presented. To leave those decisions to Western publishers, according to Bakare-Yusuf, means “they would actually control the story.”

But operating a business in Nigeria isn’t for the faint-hearted, a lesson the co-founders learned after 10,000 copies of their first title were ruined by a local printer. “It was heart-breaking,” recalled Weates, who said the print-topricing ratio eventually forced them to print abroad. And then there’s the rampant piracy afflicting the country’s publishing industry; and tons of knowledge on how to sell African writing globally,” she wrote in an email.

“Having Africans write their own stories isn’t enough-they also need access to the means of production, since editorial and marketing decisions influence how African narratives get shaped and presented.”

And with a fresh outlook, Cassava Republic has broadened the term “African literature”-a label that often reinforces the stereotypi­cal notion that African stories must be anthropolo­gical or present Africa as a problem-by publishing works on a plethora of themes and in every possible setting.

“For us, African literature is whatever an African writer wants it to be,” asserted Bakare-Yusuf. As such, a novel like Sarah Ladipo Manyika’s Like a Mule Bringing Ice Cream to the Sun, about a sexually confident septuagena­rian Nigerian woman living in San Francisco, which was passed over by mainstream publishers, found a home at Cassava Republic.

Claire Armitstead, books editor for the UK’s Guardian and Observer, noted that Manyika’s novel, which was shortliste­d for the Goldsmiths Prize for innovative fiction, caught the judges’ attention in part because Cassava Republic positioned the author among “an internatio­nal community of writers who are trying to do something different in fiction.”

 ??  ?? Bibi Bakare Yusuf. Co-founder of Cassava Republic Press
Bibi Bakare Yusuf. Co-founder of Cassava Republic Press

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