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What to Read Now: Kenya

Ken N. Kamoche

Kenya is a country in transition. For decades, the country enjoyed a reputation as an oasis of peace in a troubled east African region. But behind this façade of peace, Kenya's full potential continued to be stifled by poor and dictatorial leadership, ethnic chauvinism, and corruption. Kenyans are a resilient lot, and we believe our country has great potential, from sporting excellence and great safaris to engaging literature.

Petals of Blood (1977)

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o

My Father's Paradise
 Kenya's best-known author examines the struggles that are pulling a society apart in a country that has just emerged from colonial rule. The ordinary people who expected so much from their new leaders now find themselves dealing with an even bigger enemy in the form of an alliance between foreigners and the new elite.


The Last Plague (2000)

Meja Mwangi

Iraqi Girl: Diary of a Teenage Girl in Iraq
For a long time, AIDS remained a taboo topic, even as it silently yet unrelentingly destroyed society. Mwangi tackles the topic head-on, with a combination of satire and stark realism, as he tells the story of one woman's mission to save her community.


 

 

 


It's Our Turn to Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistle-Blower (2009)

Michela Wrong

Baghdad Mon Amour

This book, which reads like a political thriller, tells the true story of an anticorruption czar who takes his battle to the most powerful people in the country. It also seeks to explain why corruption has been allowed for generations to become part of the fabric of Kenyan society.

 

 

Ken N. Kamoche (kenkamoche.com) was born and raised in Kenya. His collection of short stories, A Fragile Hope (Salt, 2007), was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Best First Book Award. Also a journalist, Kamoche has been a columnist for Kenyan newspapers. His new novel, True Warriors, was first published as a short story in Crossing Borders, a British Council magazine, and his story "Secondhand Wife" appears on page 17 of this issue.

 

From World Literature Today 85, no. 5

Back Issue
September 2011 Issue

Sept./Oct. 2011

Poetry Untethered, the marquee section in this issue, features essays and poems by nine poets from the English-speaking world — including Jane Hirshfield, Ilya Kaminsky, and Maya Khosla — plus a compelling interview with Dana Gioia.

Purchase this issue


Table of Contents

COVER FEATURE: Poetry Untethered

with contributions from

WEB HIGHLIGHTS

EDITOR'S NOTE

LETTERS/EDITOR'S CHOICE

NOTEBOOK

INTERNATIONAL CRIME & MYSTERY

  • The Crime Writing of Blake Edwards - J. Madison Davis

WORLD LITERATURE IN REVIEW

OUTPOST: NEW YORK CITY