- Home
- Short Stories
- In America - A Short Story by Maik Nwosu
In America - A Short Story by Maik Nwosu
- By Maik Nwosu
- Published May 23, 2005
- Short Stories
-
Rating:




Maik Nwosu
Maik Nwosu, editor of The Source news magazine in Lagos, is currently enrolled in a doctoral program at Syracuse University, New York, as a university fellow. Also a fellow of the Akademie Schloss Solitude in Stuttgart, Germany, his first poetry collection, Suns of Kush, won the Association of Nigerian Authors/Cadbury Poetry Prize in 1995. The judging panel, chaired by Professor Theo Vincent, described him as "an important new voice in Nigerian poetry. Taking their origin from his immediate environment, Maik Nwosu's poetry works in wide lyrical sweeps, often brilliantly, dwelling, sometimes with humor and eloquence, on the black man's plight." His first novel, Invisible Chapters, was awarded the Association of Nigerian Authors Prose Prize in 1999. In his review, Odia Ofeimun, former president of the Association of Nigerian Authors, underscored its presentation of "a nuanced picture" that unveils "the unchanging ways of power as they have not been so studiously presented since Wole Soyinka's Season of Anomy." Obi Nwakanma, arts editor of Sunday Vanguard at the time, had earlier noted: "No novel, not since Achebe's Anthills of the Savannah, has created, and with such power, the mood of our post-colonial society. Maik Nwosu's novel has finally declared the arrival of the new generation, and the inexorable passing of the old." Nwosu has also published a collection of short stories, Return to Algadez, and a second novel, Alpha Song. As a journalist, he has received both the Nigeria Media Merit Award for Arts Reporter of the Year and the Nigeria Media Merit Award for Journalist of the Year.
View all Entries by Maik NwosuMy search for a female friend turned out better. It started with the hint of a promising relationship with a stylish white American, who wore her dresses like personalized fashion statements and plastered herself with rings – nose rings, ear rings, ankle rings, finger rings, even the index of nipple rings. She was a junior at NYU and her name was Missy, or so she preferred to be called. Our meeting was promising in that, after conversing on the exotic at the cafeteria for about an hour, she gave me her phone number. When I called her to set up a first date, that promise began to cloud over.
“There’s something I need to know,” she said. “Do you get high?”
“I’m African, you know. I never get low.” It was an attempt at humor, to evade answering a question that I was unsure what the right answer was.
“I mean: do you do stuff?”
“Depends on the stuff.”
“Come on, it’s either you get high or you don’t. I can’t go out with you if you don’t do stuff.”
I only had a vague idea of what she was talking about, but since it was obviously an important test for me to pass, I said: “Sure, I do stuff all the time.”
It was a ruinous outing. We went to a ‘rave’ where the techno music was insufferably metallic and loud, and everyone was so buoyed up by Ecstasy or Adam that it was as if I was witnessing a surreal realization of a mass levitation project. I was so noticeably out of place that Missy simply floated towards a fellow in an all-leather outfit who had long risen above the level of a mere mortal like me. I left quietly.
After Missy, I began to date Kristal, a graduate student from
Her own “high” was the theater. So, we spent several evenings at a small, dense-toned theater near the campus called The Stage. Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Hatful of Rain. Amadeus. Constant Star. Stones in His Pockets. Hamlet. Private Lives. The Wizard of Oz. Hedwig and the Angry Inch. We watched them all. For me, it was a return, this time deeper in its impact, to a world that had fascinated me as a boy at the Ali Baba Cinema. For her, I think it was an escape from the tedium of living in
“You never know,” I told her, after we watched Private Lives. “Maybe you’ll marry this guy in
“You’re rewriting the play,” she said, linking her arms with mine. “And life is not a theater.”
“It could be,” I said, “our theater.”
“It could be – except that I have to go back to
She left the day after her graduation. She could not wait, she said. Our relationship had been of some importance to her, but not in the way that I had begun to hope. She had brought a breezy warmth into my life that I had been unable to find in
After Kristal returned to
The “reality shows” first captivated me. The rage then was one about a band of sea-thieves shipwrecked on a desert island and haunted by nifty natives. It was an elaborate set, a rich attempt to provide vicarious enjoyment in the starkness of being and survival. It was number one in the ratings, and everyone was talking about it. Some people were also making bets about who would emerge the last survivor – and go home with a million dollars. It was a staggering sum, I felt, for such poor playacting. After some time, my interest waned. The “reality shows” were, after all, more built-up than real.
Next, I became a fan of a quiz show that promised a million dollars to any contestant who managed to correctly answer twenty questions. For each correct answer, the contestant won a twentieth of the prize money. Not surprisingly, contestants poured in from all parts of the country, some all the way from
I moved on to the late night talk shows, and I remained a fan for a long time. It became a great nightcap, a breezy way of summing the events of the day and exposing them in their laughable underwear. These were not shows that shirked or dressed up savagery, yet they were flush with the very thing that I had been missing since my arrival: laughter, rolling-in-the-sand laughter. Whoever had set the clocks of the late night shows at about midnight must have been in the spirit at the time. It was a good time for
The timing was also right because the late night news, about an hour or so before the late night talk shows, dripped with so much blood and dissipated so much gun smoke that the late night talk shows were like strong bursts of fresh air. I had initially been drawn to the news as a way of knowing what was happening around me. Soon, I began to dread its strange-but-familiar revelations. At this stage, only my fascination with the late night talk shows remained. My interest in the evenings shifted to the Internet, a wider world with more variables. It also gave me a better way of keeping pace with what was happening back home, instead of the occasional obituary notice about
The Internet was also another return, via a different route, to my past. At boarding school, one of the great things that had linked us to the world beyond was the allure of pen pals. There were the scams, of course, like sending our films to be processed in photo laboratories in
The great hurrahs were when the replies came back with pictures and exhilarating pledges of love. The school roared when I received a reply in a large white envelope plastered with lipstick traces. It contained ten pictures of Alana, my pen pal from
The Internet brought back memories of those pen pal days in a wistful way. Nothing ever came of any of them in the long run, to the best of my knowledge. They bloomed and petered out according to a rhythm that was beyond us, but in their brief periods of bloom they blessed us with a grand vision of ourselves and of the world. I still thought about Alana sometimes, or rather her name would sometimes bob up in my mind. Now, all alone in
The only success I did record on the Internet’s People Search engines was my attempt to trace Chidi. For a long time, I had been too upset to bother about him. But living in
I turned to online dating sites and chat rooms. I was intrigued by the proliferation of such avenues, and how they harked back to the pen pal era. That things had changed since we searched for pen pals soon became clear to me. We had been bashful in those days, hiding our lust in honeyed words and Shakespearean sonnets. It was a brazen new age now, one that had little faith in the imagination. These sites thrived instead on soft pornography and leaping invitations: “Hi, I’m Jenny. I have green hair and love to wear mauve panties. I’m looking for a guy with purple eyes and the right inch.” What ever had happened to the chase?
I began to construct my website one snowy night in February, two years after my departure from
Spread The Word
Related Entries
6 Responses to "In America - A Short Story by Maik Nwosu" 
|
said this on 05 Jul 2005 8:04:25 AM EDT
This was a beautiful story. Well told and very invocative of the per-immigration experience as well as the immigrant experience of many people not only Nigerians. I was able to picture the US embassy in Lagos pre-9/11 and also appreciate the feeling of loneliness that was evoked many times. Very good!
|
|
said this on 05 Jul 2005 10:19:02 PM EDT
Maik described his experience in a very clear concise and humourous manner. Anybody reading this article in America, Nigeria or any other place will be able to personally identify with some aspect of his story or the entire narrative itself.
Great Job. |
|
said this on 13 Mar 2007 2:29:29 PM EDT
Wow! Great story! The story of every immigrant in America. I always wondered if these are the things that united International students on campus-- our common experience of culture shock. You are a great storyteller!
|
|
said this on 28 Jul 2007 7:41:49 PM EDT
nice story!!
|
|
said this on 10 Jul 2008 7:52:03 AM EDT
Sure, a good traveller's diary; lengthy, yet still stingy with revelations. Obviously, below the wit of the maik nwosu we know
|
|
said this on 14 Sep 2008 9:47:22 PM EDT
Maik, thank you for sharing this story. Your struggle to get to America should be read by everyone. Good Luck, I bid you good fortune.
|
Author)