Kwani Trust

  • Discovering Home by Binyavanga Wainaina

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:53 pm by Kwani


    Author: Binyavanga Wainaina
    Series: Kwanini
    Awards: Winner of the 2002 Caine Prize for African fiction

    Winner of the 2002 Caine Prize for African fiction, Discovering Home tells the Kenyan version of that universal story: returning home and seeing it for the first time. By turns compassionate and bitingly ironic, this Kwanini takes readers on a whirlwind journey from Rift Valley to Maasailand and beyond. Along the way, the social geography underlying family relations, political contacts, the Ndombolo dance and the Sunday sermon are revealed in all their solemn hilarity.

  • Purple Hibiscus by Chimamanda Adichie

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:43 pm by Kwani


    Author: Chimamanda Adichie
    Series: Kwani

    Chimamanda Adichie was 25 years old when she wrote her debut novel, which isn’t in itself a reason to read it. But it does add to the wonder evoked by such a gripping narration of the many forms oppression can take. Purple Hibiscus follows a young woman’s liberation from her tyrannical father; it is a drama within a drama, placed in the Nigerian context of western colonial influence and a powerful Christianity bent on stamping out the last traces of native religion.

  • Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Adichie

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:33 pm by Kwani


    Author: Chimamanda Adichie
    Series: Kwani

    In 1967, most African nations were caught up in the euphoria of the independence movement that had recently swept the continent. But when Nigeria’s Igbo people declared their independence from the mother state, the country became one of the first in post-colonial Africa to go to war with itself. (more…)

  • Kizuizini by Joseph Muthee

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:21 pm by Kwani


    Author: Joseph Muthee
    Series: Kwani

    In 1954, at the height of the Special Emergency that preceded Kenyan independence, Joseph Muthee was sent to prison by his colonial boss on suspicion of being a Mau Mau rebel. Kizuizini is his autobiographical account of the five years he spent in detention, half a decade of continuous transfer from one harsh jail to another. It is also a chronicle of the Mau Mau themselves – what they fought for, where they hid, and who betrayed them. Writing in Swahili from his farm in central Kenya, the now-80-year-old Muthee has provided a rare glimpse into his country’s turbulent birth.

  • Kwani? 04

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:01 pm by Kwani

    Following the great tradition set by its three predecessors, Kwani? 04 presents a wail of new voices in literary concert with the not so new. The now established talents - Binyavanga Wainaina, Muthoni Garland, Doreen Baingana- share these pages with the fast risers: Billy Kahora, Mukoma wa Ngugi and Shalini Gidoomal. (more…)

  • Kwani? 03

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 1:54 pm by Kwani

    The recently published kwani? 03 has been described by critics and kwani? lovers alike as the best of the series and an indicator of how Kenya’s most popular journal has grown. In all aspects – editing, design, layout and breadth of material, kwani? 03 introduces a new chapter to the creative writing scene. Themed on the seventies, the cover uses the visual arts to make the written word as interesting and interactive as possible. Established writers M. G. Vassanji and Zimbabwe’s Charles Mungoshi grace its pages, among several other new writers published, for the first time, in kwani? 03. Creative non-fiction with social commentary also appears in the new issue, marking a new phase for kwani?.


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Yet more fish cakes

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The end of the fish cakes


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