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Wizard of the Crow
 
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Wizard of the Crow (Hardcover)

by Ngugi Wa Thiong'o (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
RRP: £18.99
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Wizard of the Crow + A Grain of Wheat (Penguin Modern Classics) + Nervous Conditions
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 784 pages
  • Publisher: Harvill Secker (3 Aug 2006)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1846550343
  • ISBN-13: 978-1846550348
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.8 x 5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 594,653 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #20 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > N > Ngugi, Wa Thiong'o

Product Description

The Sunday Times

"Epic….daring satire"

Sunday Herald

'huge, comic novel, shimmering, shifting discourse. It is the crowning achievement of an astonishing career.' - Brian Morton --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ngugi's Best Novel!, 27 Sep 2006
By Steve Gronert Ellerhoff (Portland, OR USA) - See all my reviews
I was first introduced to Ngugi's novels in my African literature class when I was an undergrad. My mentor, Peter Nazareth, who also teaches an incredible course on Elvis Presley, went to college with Ngugi in Uganda and postgraduate school in Leeds, England. The only writer from Africa I'd read up until that course was Achebe, but there are so many truly amazing novels by Africans out there--a whole literature that goes far beyond Things Fall Apart: The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born by Armah, Maru by Bessie Head, A Season of Migration to the North by Salih, The Famished Road by Okri, The Palm-Wine Drunkard by Tutuola, The Book of Secrets by Vassanji, Nehanda by Vera, A Walk in the Night by La Guma, The General Is Up by my mentor Peter Nazareth, and on and on. The best storyteller among them all, however, I must say, in my own opinion, is Ngugi wa Thiong'o. From his first works on up, they've just been better and better. A Grain of Wheat was the first I read, all about England giving up colonial power over Kenya, the Mau Mau movement, and Gikuyu culture. Another of his novels I love and have read several times is Devil on the Cross. He was detained by the Kenyan government in the late seventies after his novel Petals of Blood sparked the popular imagination and made him a threat to the regime. While in detention, he wrote Devil on the Cross, I'm told partly on toilet paper as it was all there was to write upon. Soaring with magic realism, it gives a mythic, moral critique of the Kenya he was experiencing. It's one of the great books I've read. And until this summer, it was my favorite of his works.

His latest book is Wizard of the Crow and I literally don't have the skills to convey how great it is. It's been awhile since he published a novel. His last novel before this was Matigari, which he wrote in 1983-84, first in Gikuyu and then translated it himself into English (as he'd done with Devil on the Cross). Over twenty years, then, since he finished his last novel. As it's published, it's 766 pages long, his longest work. And, I have to say, it is his best. It is the kind of story that cannot be written quickly, it's scope encompassing much more than most novels do. This was a book that demanded incubation.

Wizard of the Crow isn't so much an African novel as it is a novel that explores Africa in a global context. It focuses on a fictitious country called Aburiria, which is controlled by a dictator called The Ruler. He's completely bonkers, and it isn't hard for me to see Idi Amin in this leader--the Ngatho - Acknowledgments at the end also point back to the Moi dictatorship of Kenya. But he, and his cabinet (with men who've undergone impossible plastic surgeries in Europe to have lightbulb-sized eyes and forearm-length ears--so as to be the eyes and ears of the country), aren't the only villains in this book. There's also the greedy businessmen and the Global Bank, who come to consider giving The Ruler money to build his very own tower of Babel so that he can speak to God every morning. On top of that, the country's money is cursed, giving off an overpowering stench to those people sensitive enough to such things as corruption, greed, and evil.

There are good guys, too, though. Of course there are. Ngugi isn't one of those writers who turns his back on hope. Kamiti is a young man, educated postgrad in India, who has been homeless and unemployed for several years after graduating--no one in Aburiria will hire him. He falls into his role as the Wizard of the Crow after pulling a prank to get a cop off his tail. He doesn't believe the mumbo jumbo he speaks, but everyone around hears of his powers and believes he's a healer and incredible sorcerer. Nyawira is a young woman he meets and the two of them develop an intense bond. She's tough, secretly being one of the top members of an underground movement that is against The Ruler and his barbaric administration. She also, interestingly, comes to wear the mantle of the Wizard of the Crow.

Ngugi's satirical edge is sharper than it's ever been, and he really cuts open the lies and shams of the world to get down to what's really moral and good in human beings. I can't recommend this novel enough. If you're already into novels by African writers, you'll love this and might be amazed, as I have been, at how he ties the African experience together within the bigger picture. And if you haven't read any novels by Africans before, well, this is the one to read. It's got it all.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Compelling and furious narrative, 13 Dec 2006
A furious, powerful and compelling narrative that might be read with unease in some African political circles (hopefully nobody will be calling for the banning of this book!). Ngugi's Wizard of the Crow lays bare the absurdity of contemporary African political leadership, which by and large is characterized by perverse dictatorships insensitive and contemptuous of the citizenry. If you have been to Africa and wondered how come pot-bellied ruling party functionaries are able to afford monstrous Hummers whilst multitudes are confined to a sorry state of depravity, then this book will help you understand why collective salvation remains a myth on the continent and personal aggrandizement at the expense of exploiting the peasantry is not seen for the vice which it is. Ngugi introduces the reader to the murky politics of greed, selfishness, corruption, sycophancy, rivalry and intimidation, which blight much of post-colonial Africa. In this prodigious literary work Ngugi lashes out at the sycophants who form the African political elite, mocking their singular obsession with pleasing the whims of the ruler, a strongman who relies on the nation's security forces to stifle political opposition. Indeed Ngugi's Ruler of the Free Republic of Aburiria is the archetypical sub-Sahara African dictator, sharing quite some traits with Moi, Mobutu and Museveni. Ngugi is also mindful that the blame for Africa's agonizing hopelessness is equally shared by western institutions and governments that for selfish reasons continue to support dictatorial regimes and hence help banish Africans to inhuman socio-political and economic conditions. A superb novel with a great and relevant storyline.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A crown jewel, 16 Dec 2006
By Sancho (North Carolina) - See all my reviews
If Ngugi were to stop writing today, I would say THE WIZARD OF THE CROW crowmed his writing history as his masterpiece. The ideas in the book are broad-ranged and are brought out through characters that deep, alive and imposing. The Republic where the story is set can be any of the many Sub-Saharan countries that have been hijacked by people of the evil disposition (the local kleptocrats, blood-thirsty maniacs and their foreign backers).

WIZARD OF THE CROW says what other titles like Triple Agent Double Cross, The Beautiful Ones are not yet born, Disciples of Fortune, 1984; did not completely say. In short it brings African literature again to the spot light. I recently read The Usurper and Others, Half of a Yellow Sun. In short, there are beautiful African writings out there that are very insightful.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
This is one of, if not my favourite book I have ever read. I bought this after reading a reveiw of it and an interveiw with the author in the Big Issue. Read more
Published 7 months ago by J. R. "Bob" Dobbs #99

5.0 out of 5 stars A Ruler Among Epics
A modern classic. Sprawling and ambitious, Wizard of the Crow brims with fable and allegory, but never missteps into magical realism. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Pablo K

4.0 out of 5 stars A delicious satire
Aburiria is a fictional country in Africa, ruled by The Ruler, a dictator unlike any other. For his birthday, his cabinet has decided to build a huge tower, tall enough to reach... Read more
Published on 13 Nov 2007 by Mikko Saari

4.0 out of 5 stars Overlong, yet still interesting. . .
I was really looking forward to reading this novel. Ngugi wa Thiong'o's aim with this sprawling satire was "to sum up Africa of the twentieth century in the context of two... Read more
Published on 8 Sep 2007 by Patrick St-Denis

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