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"As a Caribbean child reading about Africa I remember the shock of recognition, ‘But – that’s just like us!’"

My first encounter with African literature was when I was fourteen or fifteen, living in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in the 1980s. I’d been an avid reader as a child, but as a teenager I made little headway with Austen, Dickens, or the Brontës. (I gravitated more to Americans: Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Miller.) When I read Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, then Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country, and Too Late the Phalarope, I felt a connection to these books that I hadn’t felt with the English novels, although I didn’t understand why.

In my mid-twenties, when I was starting to write, I came to Doris Lessing and J. M. Coetzee and I realised what had stirred me about these African novels: simply, that the physical reality of the characters’ lives was similar to the life I knew in the Caribbean. In Lessing’s The Grass is Singing, think of that little wooden house with the tin roof, the big dome of the unblinking blue sky above, that merciless blazing sun. In Things Fall Apart, see how much happens during the cool of the night-time, how people’s lives are organised around the need to avoid the midday heat. Though I’d never felt the need to ‘see myself’ as a Caribbean child reflected in a novel, I do remember, in Cry, the Beloved Country, reading about the red-brown dust that clings to the soles of people’s feet and feeling the shock of recognition, of thinking, ‘But – that’s just like us!’

In my early thirties, from around 2005 onwards, I was writing more seriously and noticing that new African/diasporic novels were gaining recognition. I read Nigerian British writer Diana Evans’ novel 26a partly as research, and partly because we lived in the same neighbourhood in London. Later, I read Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie (Nigeria) and Petina Gappah (Zimbabwe) because I discovered that my editor at Faber had published both authors. What struck me was the clash of ‘old’ and ‘modern’ Africa – the houseboy in the opening chapters of Adichie’s Half of a Yellow Sun who’s amazed by the toilet and the fridge, for example: it was eye-opening to realise that both traditional and modern worlds co-existed in Nigeria, and that the society was large enough to accommodate that. In Gappah’s short story, ‘Our Man in Geneva Wins A Million Euros’, a Nigerian man in Switzerland responds to a scam email and ends up transferring his life savings to a fraudulent account and losing everything: again, it was the clash of worlds that struck me, and the human cost of individuals falling through the gap.

Overall, I have the sense that African writers are setting the pace in the fearlessness with which they approach potentially awkward subjects. In the novel Americanah, for example, I was impressed that Adichie so bluntly drew a distinction between ‘American blacks’ and African immigrants to the USA, exposing a cultural gap which perhaps had previously been denied. Another example is the (as I perceive it) change in the treatment of spiritual ideas: in 2005, in Evans’ book 26A, the Igbo concept of ogbanje spirit-possession is used as a metaphor throughout the novel, yet the word ogbanje is never used, and one character privately calls the concept ‘a load of had dock’. Fast forward to 2019, and in Akwaeke Emezi’s novel Freshwater, the ogbanje is now centre-stage, in person, controlling the narrative, and very convincingly. As a Caribbean writer, if there’s one thing I can learn from African literature, it’s to allow myself to be bolder in my own work and my own thinking: to meet the ogbanje head-on.

Claire Adam

Claire Adam is from Port of Spain, Trinidad and now lives with her family in south London. She studied Physics at Brown University, then lived in Italy and Ireland for several years before settling in London. She did an MA in Creative and Life Writing at Goldsmiths (University of London), where she was shortlisted for the 2012 Pat Kavanagh Award. Her first novel, Golden Child (Faber & Faber, 2019) won the Desmond Elliott Prize for best debut novel published in the UK, the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award and the Society of Authors McKitterick Prize. It was featured on BBC Radio 4 Book at Bedtime, Radio 2 Bookclub with Jo Whiley, and listed as one of the BBC’s ‘100 novels that shaped our world’. In the USA, it was selected for Sarah Jessica Parker’s imprint, SJP for Hogarth, and was the winner of the 2019 Barnes & Noble ‘Discover’ Prize, for best fiction debut published in the USA. It was named a ‘Book of the Year’ by the Evening Standard and The Times.

© Claire Adam
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