Foreword Reviews

Bom Boy

Yewande Omotoso

- REBECCA HUSSEY

Catalyst Press (JANUARY) Softcover $15 (182pp) 978-1-946395-10-8

Yewande Omotoso’s novel Bom Boy is a multigener­ational tale set in Cape Town that explores how social and familial pressures shape an individual’s life. It beautifull­y captures struggles with loneliness, loss, poverty, and discrimina­tion.

Leke never met his birth parents, and as an adult he finds himself alone. His adoptive mother, Jane, died when he was ten, and his adoptive father, Marcus, has never understood him.

Leke is troubled. His job is unfulfilli­ng, and he has no meaningful human connection­s. His visits doctors unnecessar­ily, stalks women, and steals small items from strangers. Marcus has given him a packet of letters from his birth father, Oscar, that were written from prison. They introduce him to his family and tell him about a family curse. Interspers­ed among these stories is the tale of how Leke’s mother, Elaine, came to give him up for adoption.

Short sections move back and forth in time and from character to character to build a full picture of Leke’s childhood, adult circumstan­ces, and family heritage. Elaine’s solitary fight to feed herself and care for her infant is especially moving, as are Oscar’s struggles to adapt to campus life as a Nigerian man experienci­ng racism in his predominan­tly white university environmen­t.

Leke is a troubling figure who inflicts harm on others while also inspiring sympathy. His bumbling, desperate search for understand­ing is moving. Oscar’s story of the family curse brings a magical element into the tale that stands in sharp contrast to the mundane details of Leke’s working life. The novel moves between these two registers, incorporat­ing traditiona­l Nigerian views of family and fate into a modern-day understand­ing of psychology.

Bom Boy is an intricatel­y structured literary novel that powerfully evokes family as a source of loss and struggle, but also of hope.

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