In “Diary of an Invasion,” Normal Life in Ukraine Has Become a Myth – Chicago Review of Books

In “Diary of an Invasion,” Normal Life in Ukraine Has Become a Myth – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] In a recent opinion piece for The Guardian, Andrey Kurkov writes about recycling. While over 3,000 Russian tanks have been destroyed since the beginning of the latest war in Ukraine, it’s the smaller scrap metal and artillery shell casings that artists have focused on painting for European auctions that have raised money for the … Read more

Rwandan Myth and Christianization in “Kibogo” – Chicago Review of Books

Rwandan Myth and Christianization in “Kibogo” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] Kibogo by French-Rwandan writer Scholastique Mukasonga, translated by Mark Polizzotti, recreates mid-20th-century Rwanda, at the time a Belgian colony. The novel begins during the Second World War, some 13 years after Musinga, the Rwandan king, was deposed for his refusal to convert to Catholicism. In the subsequent years, Rwandans were willingly or forcibly converted, … Read more

Myth and Metaphor in “Walking on Cowrie Shells” – Chicago Review of Books

Myth and Metaphor in “Walking on Cowrie Shells” – Chicago Review of Books

[ad_1] The final story of Nana Nkweti’s debut short story collection, “Kinks,” bears the book title in a telling passage:  “No matter how many boardroom doors Jennifer walked through, sometimes she felt her steps falter—in the Ghanaian beauty shop, at Awing tribal meetings, she felt like a counterfeit African, felt the unworthiness of the maid’s … Read more