African books on American Shelves
Adichie's The Thing Around Your Neck.I probably just found my best Barnes and Noble, the one in the Birdcage shopping center in Sacramento. Not only was I able to find the African literature titles I have been looking for, but they were merchandised face-out, to show that they are hot items. Even when I couldn't find one of the titles, a bookseller walked me to the shelf, and there, face-out, was Adoabi T. Nwaubani's novel, I Do Not Come to You by Chance.
Then what the bookseller said after that was just wonderful: "African fiction is the new hot product in the market, even the music department is seeing many new African titles, especially from Southern Africa."
I stood there smiling. I am happy that finally I can walk into a bookstore and find some of the latest African titles on the shelves. Ten years ago that was not the situation. I even worked for a bookstore myself as an inventory manager, and I remember how dismal my efforts to acquire African titles were. Not now; this is indeed Africa's time... and that counts for a lot because the talent coming out of the continent is breathtaking. This is not just a sense of nostalgia, but we are talking of big corporations reaching for a piece of the African cake....
So, of course, I took a few photos, following Paulo Coelo's example of posting bookstore displays of his books on his blog. These books were displayed under New Fiction:
Irene Sabatini's The Boy Next Door.
Petina Gappah's An Elegy for Easterly. I knew I was going to do some impulsive purchases. Since I already own the books pictured here, I ended up buying Uwem Akpan's paperback edition of Say You Are One of Them, a winner of the Commonwealth Prize, Adoabi Tricia Nwaubani's I Do Not Come to You by Chance (I made the mistake of reading the prologue. I liked the , detail, voice, and humor), and my third copy of Things Fall Apart, which means that now I will have three copies on my shelf, but they are different editions signifying different printings. The one I got today satisfies the scholar in me--it is the Norton Critical Edition, which contains background information, critical essays and other documents that help a student of the book understand the criticism, content, and context of the novel. It's a good 590 pages.
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