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Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Review: Black Star Nairobi, Mukoma wa Ngugi (Kenya)

Title: Black Star Nairobi
Author: Mukoma wa Ngugi
Publication: 2013/Brooklyn, New York: Melville House Publishing
ISBN #: 978-1-61219-210-9
# of pages: 267
Discovered by scanning all the shelves at a bookstore, looking for new authors
Read in paper format
Also available in e-book format
Link to author’s website: Mukoma wa Ngugi

For the past three years, Ishmael and Odhiambo, known simply as O, have operated the Black Star detective agency. Fortunately O is still a police officer and his boss Hassan tosses them the odd case, which is keeping them in business. This latest case is very odd, the decomposing body of an African-American killed execution style and left to rot in Ngong Forest near Nairobi. As a displaced African-American, this hits close to home for Ishmael. Their investigation has barely begun when their world is rocked...literally...by an explosion at the Norfolk Hotel. Ishmael strongly believes the incidents are connected so they set out to see what is happening at the hotel.

Ethnic tension bubbles just below the surface in Kenya as the 2007 elections are about to be held. Some Americans...and many Kenyans...were killed at the hotel so fears of Al-Qaeda involvement are running rampant, bringing the CIA into the picture. Ishmael and O are told to back off, which only makes them more curious.

Their investigation quickly takes an ugly turn and they no longer know whom to trust. Muddy, Rwandan genocide survivor and Ishmael’s girlfriend, soon joins their quest for the truth.

This turned out to be more thriller than murder mystery. The Kenyan election backdrop was very interesting, a taste of how quickly a country can disintegrate into violence. The three main characters are strong ones and you soon want to know more about each of their backgrounds. I would like to read the first book in the series to learn how Ishmael ended up in Kenya. The book does go bit astray about halfway through and the plot becomes more convoluted than necessary. However, the story and the lead characters carry the reader through to the end.

Rating: (°_°)             Worth reading

Notable sentence:  “Pulled in to this vortex of violence and more violence, my principles of justice were becoming rudimentary – us against them.”

Author wa Ngugi was born in the USA but grew up in Kenya. In addition to the first mystery in this series “Nairobi Heat”, he has also written poetry, fiction and non-fiction books, political columns and essays. He is an Assistant Professor of English at Cornell University and his father is a renowned African author.  

 

Sunday, 3 March 2013

Review: A Beautiful Place to Die, Malla Nunn (Swaziland)

TITLE:              A Beautiful Place to Die
AUTHOR:         Malla Nunn
PUBLICATION: 2009/Atria Books (Simon & Schuster Inc), New York
ISBN #             978-1-4165-8620-3
# PAGES:        373
Discovered in a review by Mysteries in Paradise
Read in paper format
Also available in e-book format
 
The book opens in 1952 in South Africa, a time when new apartheid laws were being introduced yearly. Detective Sergeant Emmanuel Cooper was in deep country, in the northwestern part of South Africa, near the Mozambique border, working on a murder case which was quickly resolved. Before he could head back to Johannesburg, his boss told him to check on another possible homicide near Jacob’s Rest. What he discovers is a white police captain, Willem Pretorius, face down in the river, shot in the head and the back. The dead man’s three huge Afrikaner sons are not happy to see one lone officer there to investigate. Cooper is not happy to be that one lone officer.


Cooper has no colour prejudices and respectfully interacts into each different local group, his command of the Zulu language a definite benefit. The local force consists of only three other officers: two white officers Constable Hansie Hepple the ineffective teenager and Lieutenant Sarel Uys, current on vacation, and the quietly competent Zulu-Shangaan tracker Constable Samuel Shabalala.

As Cooper tries to build a rapport with Shabalala, he struggles to keep his World War II nightmares at bay. When the infamous Security Branch takes over the case, determined to beat a confession out of whomever they need to pin this on, Cooper is relegated to investigating a local unsolved peeping tom case which he hopes will let him keep one foot into the murder investigation.

This was an excellent book, with interesting historical nuances running through it. The remaining effects on Cooper so recently involved in a foreign war, the separateness and connectedness of racial groups long divided physically, plus the tightening restrictions and horrific penalties of apartheid are the backdrop to a well-paced murder mystery.

Given the apparent proximity of fictional Jacob’s Rest to Lorenzo Marques (now Maputo) in Mozambique, the setting of this story appears to be very close to the border of Swaziland. This is the first novel written by Malla Nunn. She was born in Swaziland and later moved to Australia with her family. Given the setting and her background, I have chosen to list her as a Swaziland author in the Global Reading Challenge. She has since written three more books:

. Let the Dead Lie
. Blessed are the Dead (alternate title: Silent Valley)
. Present Darkness