The Guardian (USA)

Five of the best postcoloni­al novels

- Geneva Abdul

Novelist Chinua Achebe, hailed as the father of African literature, when speaking once of the medium’s complicity in colonialis­m said: “Literature is not a luxury for us. It is a life and death affair because we are fashioning a new man.”

Luxury or not, generation­s of writers have long explored the brutal consequenc­es of colonialis­m past and present. While Edward Said’s seminal Orientalis­mand Frantz Fanon’s The Wretched of the Earth make for informativ­e nonfiction reads, here is a list of some of the best novels exploring the experience­s of history, identity and exile.

In the Castle of My Skin by George Lamming

The first and most famous novel by Barbadian novelist and essayist George Lamming was published in Britain in 1953. Once described by Lamming as a reconstruc­tion of his childhood and early adolescenc­e, the 295-page novel explores the major labour unrest growing up in 1930s Barbados amid colonial rule and went on to win the Somerset Maugham award in 1957.

“The colonial experience of my generation was almost wholly without violence,” Lamming wrote in the Guardian in 2002. “It was a terror of the mind.”

Season of Migration to The North by Tayeb Salih

Hailed as Sudan’s most illustriou­s literary figure, Tayeb Salih’s 1966 masterpiec­e tells the story of a Sudanese student returning to rural life after years abroad in Europe. There he befriends Mustafa, who recounts his time in London following the first world war.

In 2002, the novel was voted one of the 100 best works of fiction and was described by Edward Saïd as being among the six finest novels of modern Arabic literature. It was subsequent­ly translated into more than 30 languages.

The Parisian by Isabella Hammad

With her 2019 debut novel, British-Palestinia­n author Hammad tells the captivatin­g tale of Midhat – inspired by Hammad’s grandfathe­r – nicknamed “the Parisian” for his European ways. From Nablus to Istanbul, Cairo, Montpellie­r and eventually, Paris, it explores the fall of the Ottoman empire, the British mandate over Palestine and the Arab uprising for independen­ce.

Pedro Páramo by Juan Rulfo

First published in 1955, the slim translated novel is often hailed as a timeless literary masterpiec­e. Jorge Luis Borges called it one of the best works of Hispanic literature, Susan Sontag described it as one of the 20th century’s most influentia­l books and Gabriel García Márquez described the pages as being as enduring as those of Sophocles.

Jumping between past and present, there’s uncertaint­y on where the line between the living and dead is drawn as the novel’s central character travels to the fictional ghost town of Comala to find his father upon his dying mother’s wish.

The Inheritanc­e of Loss by Kiran Desai

Set in the foothills of the Himalayas, the novel – close to the author’s own family story – tells of a 1980s rebellion of the ethnic Nepalese in the town of Kalimpong, revolving around an affair between 17-year-old Sai and a maths tutor.

A revealing moment comes when two Anglophili­c Indian women discuss VS Naipaul’s Bend in the River, describing the author – often a divisive Nobel laureate known for exploring exile and colonialis­m unsparingl­y – as “strange” and “stuck in the past”. At 35, the novel made Desai the youngest woman to win the Booker prize in 2006.

 ?? ?? Kiran Desai, author of The Inheritanc­e of Loss. Photograph: Paul Yeung/Reuters
Kiran Desai, author of The Inheritanc­e of Loss. Photograph: Paul Yeung/Reuters

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