A magical coming-of-age tale in rural Zimbabwe
Ah, you’ve arrived. Sit down, please, and make yourself comfortable. There may not be much dinner tonight – Father is still out of work; Mother can’t do anything with those stunted maize plants in the stony ground – but at least you are here, in Gushure Village, home to unsurpassed raconteurs and the Guramatunhu family, who know that telling stories staves off hunger.
Surprise awaits at every turn: thoughts and conversations bloom into poems, political speeches and songs. You will find instructions for cooking a hare, for how to defend yourself when a dead snake is your enemy’s chosen weapon, how to speak in war tongues, how to compose a fist and aim it at a tree trunk, how to eliminate animal terrorism in...
Robert Muponde holds a PhD in English from the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, where he is both a professor of English in the School of Literature, Language and Media, and the Wits Director of Postgraduate Affairs. He grew up in Rusape, Zimbabwe, and has lived and worked in Johannesburg for the past twenty years.
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