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561 works of pan-African thought. 66 matching current filters.
Baako returns from studying in America full of idealism, but his family and a society consumed by materialism destroy him. Armah's second novel, even darker than his debut.
A Ghanaian-American family navigates the first generation's dreams against the second generation's realities — identity, assimilation, and return.
Set in Croatia after the Balkan wars — though by a Sierra Leonean author, the novel's examination of memory, silence, and war's aftermath directly draws on Forna's experience of Sierra Leone's civil war.
A British psychologist arrives in post-war Sierra Leone and becomes entangled with a Sierra Leonean doctor and a dying professor whose memories span the country's descent into civil war.
Agu, a child soldier in an unnamed West African country, narrates his participation in atrocities in a fractured English that mirrors his fractured psyche. Based loosely on West Africa's civil wars.
The Sai family — Ghanaian father, Nigerian mother, four children scattered across continents — reassembles when the patriarch dies. A lyrical examination of the African immigrant family's fracture and possible healing.