The writers Ivor W. Hartmann and Emmanuel Sigauke have just co-edited
African Roar, an anthology of some of the best and most popular short stories to appear on the online e-zine Storytime. Storytime, founded in 2007 by Hartmann has quietly
established an enviable reputation for showcasing and supporting the
works of young and emerging African writers. As a debut volume of what
the editors have promised will be an annual production, it does not
disappoint. I must say that I am pleased with what my eyes devoured.
This is an eclectic collection of short stories offering ample evidence
that African literature is alive and well. New talent rises every day
from the dawn of yesterday's departure. It provokes thought in the sense
that the featured writers challenge the reader's notion of African
literature, physical boundaries, and indeed, who we are. Tradition
splinters like fragile egg shells as the authors experiment with new
forms, and new ideas. It is not always successful, but you come away
entertained and informed.

The stories showcase the dizzying and
relentless movement of restless people, and Africa stands, seemingly
caught in the crossfire of human anxieties. There are all these stories
gently excavating African experiences for the world to see. It is
refreshing that African writers are beginning to look inwards at the
various shades of African-on-African crime ravaging our continent.
Welcome to a generational shift; you will not find pot-bellied generals,
flinging idealists out of Africa’s windows. Africa is on the
move, slowly, perhaps, hopefully, away from deadly caricatures.
Who
are these writers? They are mostly young and unknown writers from
Nigeria, Ghana, and Zimbabwe; however they are united by their digital
citizenry on the Internet. They all live on the Internet, anecdotally,
at least two hours of their waking lives. They are also restless,
enduring a Diasporic existence way from their land of ancestry; in South
Africa, the UK and the USA. There are eleven pieces in this volume and
there are so many to adore. As Masimba Musodza demonstrates in the story
Yesterday’s
Dog, there are still shadows
of past struggles; however, they are fading in the consciousness of
young writers even as they feel somehow obligated to document the past.
The piece
Big
Pieces Little Pieces by the
Zimbabwean writer Novuyo Rosa Tshuma exposes the tyranny and dysfunction
of today’s patriarchy. It is a dark, disturbing, albeit
evocative piece on the insidious effects of patriarchy, alcoholism,
marital and child abuse on family and community. One is taken aback by
the plight of women and children in Africa caught in domestic and civil
wars that they did not ask for. This is a promising short story that
could have been greatly enhanced if Tshuma had worked a little bit
harder to provide an unpredictable ending. But it is a nice story,
nonetheless. Ayodele Morocco-Clarke proves to be engaging and
funny in the tale
The Nestbury Tree
about the ravages of the new Christian evangelism. It is slow getting
to a climax but it gets there nicely. Ivor W. Hartmann’s
Lost
Love showcases evocative
emotive prose poetry as the main character reminisces on the lost
possibilities of a lost love. Its power is in its ability to connect
with the reader on a personal level.
Everybody should read Beaven
Tapureta’s,
Cost of Courage
and Christopher Mlalazi’s
A Cicada in the Shimmer. They are bold and
innovative experiments, apocalyptic, visionary, touching, and brilliant:
Dambudzo Marechera, meet Ben Okri. In these stories, there are all
these pieces of brainy matter soaked in inspired lunacy. Kudos to
Mlalazi for delivering rich deep, intense prose, and for innovation; in
his story even inanimate objects become handsome and personable
characters. Charming. Magical realism is not my thing but this
was engaging. In all the creative mayhem, the poetry hangs in there,
showing all the possibilities of the bold thinker. In
Behind
the Door, Kola Tubosun deploys
his trademark penchant for teasing the wondrous out of the ordinary in a
cute story about waiting for the results of an HIV/AIDS test in
Nigeria. The suspense builds up, perhaps dies, too suddenly.
Regardless, it is an affecting story. Chuma Nwokolo’s
trademark funny cheekiness is on full display in his piece
Quarterback
& Co. It is a thoroughly
British story. This is boundary bending work. It could have been written
by any equally gifted white Briton. Nwokolo is a Nigerian immigrant in
Britain. We are the sum of our experiences.
Emmanuel Sigauke’s story,
A Return
to the Moonlight, sitting
smack in the middle of the volume, richly anchors the collection. It is a
haunting commentary on the journey away from our being: The shift from
the African self continues and finds expression in attitudes,
affectations and even in the self-deprecation. The neediness is neatly
captured. In
Tamale Blues by
Ayesha Harruna Attah, the clash of cultures is palpable; the African
culture looks positively impoverished compared to the infinite
possibilities of what comes from the West daily. It is a lovely little
story about Africa - using prose that shows promise and a liberating
boldness. It is more than a longing for the flesh. It is about longing
and lust for the fast food that passes for Western culture. Eventually
the exile breaks down and starts munching on crumpets and sipping alien
teas. And we are all impoverished and diminished by it.
I
salute Hartmann and Sigauke for sharing the gift of their vision with
the world. It is not a perfect production; there are editorial issues
that hint at the voluntary nature of this production. Some of the
stories are not quite successful; I thought Nana Awere
Damoah’s story
Truth Floats
was an awkward, if inchoate adaptation of ancient Ghanaian folklore. In
future editions, resources permitting, it would be great for each story
to be accompanied by a review or analysis. This volume breaks down
walls. Hear the fences crack and crash protesting the stampede of
restless dreams and goals. It is a good thing. The writers ask: Who are
we? Chinua Achebe says we are Africans, we are people. And I say, we are
the sum of our lived experiences and we will tell our stories as we
remember them. Yes.