Nigeria
is seeing a "thirst for literature" to which publishers are
responding, says Lola Shoneyin, organizer of the annual Ake Festival
|
Mention Nigerian
literature and the first names likely to spring to mind are Chinua Achebe, the
author of "Things Fall Apart", or the venerable Nobel laureate Wole
Soyinka.
Nigerian
writer Leye Adenle is among a new crop of writers helping to turn the page on
the post-colonial era of their esteemed predecessors
|
But
Africa's most populous nation has a new crop of writers whose work is a far cry
from the post-colonial era of their esteemed predecessors.
Olumide
Popoola's novel "When We Speak Of Nothing", for example, tells the
story of a gay teenager seeking the father he never knew in the southern oil
city of Port Harcourt.
The
book, which was published earlier this year, is written in a language mixing African
pidgin with London slang, and includes comical descriptions and textspeak.
For
Emeka Nwankwo, from Nigerian publisher Cassava Republic, breaking conventions
and expectations about literature is a way of reflecting how the country has
changed.
"We
are looking for an alternative way to tell African stories, funny, subversive
stories," he said at the launch of Popoola's novel.
"What's
going on now in Nigeria is very fascinating. New voices are coming out after a
long period of quiet."
The
most famous voice to emerge in recent years is the novelist Chimamanda Ngozi
Adichie, who made her name with "Half of a Yellow Sun" (2006) and
"Americanah" (2013).
Both
stories have since been translated into dozens of languages while the first was
adapted for cinema in 2013, starring Hollywood actors Thandie Newton and
Chiwetel Ejiofor.
-
'Thirst for literature' -
Cassava
Republic, which was launched in 2006 in Abuja and now has an office in London,
is leading the literary revolution with other local publishers such as Farafina
and Bookcraft.
In
just over a decade, it has published some 50 books. The bestseller, "In
Dependence", by Sarah Ladipo Manyika, has sold 1.7 million copies in
Nigeria and overseas.
No
genre is excluded from Cassava Republic and it has published books from science
fiction and crime to homosexuality and eroticism.
Abubakar
Adam Ibrahim's "Season of Crimson Blossoms" tells the story of an
improbable affair between an ageing widow and a petty drug dealer in the
conservative, Muslim-majority north.
Instead
of provoking a scandal, the novel won last year the country's top literary
award, the Nigeria Prize for Literature and the author US$100,000 (€85,000).
In
another category entirely is "Longthroat Memoirs: Soups, Sex and Nigerian
Taste Buds", an eccentric ode to local cuisine and its supposed
aphrodisiac properties.
With
evocative chapter headings such as "Afang Soup and Hairy Legs" and
"Eating Dog", the author Yemisi Aribisala reveals the sensual power
of yams and well-cooked fish beloved of Nigerians.
Others
such as Leye Adenle ("Easy Motion Tourist") take the reader on a
heart-stopping journey to the beating heart of Nigeria's sprawling megacity,
Lagos, and encounters with corruption, prostitution and drugs.
The
literary revival in Nigeria has seen more bookshops springing up in
working-class areas and shopping centres across the country.
It
is also taking off online. E-book application Okadabooks has some 200,000 users
and one million downloads.
"There
is a thirst for literature in Nigeria and publishers are now responding,"
said Lola Shoneyin, who organizes the Ake Festival every November.
The
event, held in the southwestern city of Abeokuta, has become a must for
booklovers, many of them under the age of 30.
-
'Anti-intellectual policies' -
The
expansion of literature in Nigeria in the 1960s and 70s was driven by British
publishers, said Shoneyin, who is also a poet and writer.
But
successive military governments in that time "frustrated the book
industry", stifling creativity with "anti-intellectual policies",
she added.
The
current challenges faced by Nigerian publishers today are different but no less
daunting.
Most
printing, for example, is done at low cost in China or India, although some
publishers are starting to bring production back home because of improved
quality.
Books
are not immune from the huge bootleg industry that affects Nigeria's entire
cultural sector from cinema to music. Badly photocopied books are hawked on the
streets or in markets.
Distribution
-- from transporting books to finding reliable points of sale -- also remains
"a challenging experience", said Bibi Bakare-Yusuf, the founder of
Cassava Republic.
But
she views the situation with an unswerving Nigerian optimism.
"A lack of infrastructure can also be an opportunity, as it allows you to think more creatively and flexibly about how to meet challenges, rather than being hampered by existing and often outdated structures that struggle to move with the time and respond to new buying and consumption patterns," she said.
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