Thoughtful, insightful and compelling, Granite is a well-executed imagining of what happened to cause the collapse of the civilisation of Great Zimbabwe (called Zimba Remabwe in the book). While adult historical fiction has experienced a recent resurgence in interest, narratives are mostly drawn from European history; Granite is refreshingly African, illuminating a relatively unexplored area in fiction. It also shifts “fictionalised history” away from the European centre: in the story, Zimba Remabwe exists as a sophisticated African city state well integrated with the rest of the mid-fifteenth-century world. It is a world in which Arab scholars travel from China and India to Europe and Britain, filing their chronicles in the revered library of Timbuktu. The narrative method is worth noting: because he cannot write, the story is dictated by a young nobleman called Mokomba – one of few survivors of his city’s downfall. The penman is Shafiq, a learned Arab traveller who is a father figure after the passing of Mokomba’s own father. Each chapter relates a series of events from these two characters’ perspectives, as they fill in what the other might have glossed over. The result is a finely rendered narrative of two distinct voices. The story is rich in detail and significance: the battle of Mokomba’s twin sister Raii against the status quo that will trap her in an arranged marriage; the bizarre prejudice experienced by the non-witches; the absolute power that corrupts the king; the tragedy of the most innocent of Mokomba’s family inviting in the pest that will kill them all; the tentative peace between nobles and commoners, which falls apart in times of peril. Granite is a stimulating, thought-provoking and exciting flight of imagination, grounded in a historical perspective that paints Africa as anything but the “dark continent”.
Оглавление
Jenny Robson. Granite
Foreword
1. Sofala
2. Beneath the hill-fortress of Zimba Remabwe
3. At the mouth of the cave of Mmwahhari
4. Westward towards Dom Bashabeng
5. To the village of the not-witches
6. Across the sunset sea
7. To the shores of the land of. the Milk people
8. The cathedral in the valley
9. Back on the pebble beach
10. Southward on the sunset sea
11. Homeward across the desert sands
12. Behind the hill-fortress
13. Inside the woven basket
14. Within the granite walls
15. Into the hinterland
Отрывок из книги
Jenny Robson
who dared to reach for his dream.
.....
“Come, young Shafiq, let me describe for you the court of the great Emperor of China. Such a place of luxury and magnificent gifts! Yes, my grandson. And with so many wives and all of themwith feet so tiny it is a wonder they can stand upright …”
“Come, Shafiq, my young grand-nephew, while your mother is out at the market. Come let me tell you of the strange customs of the Crusaders: the Franks, the Germanics, the Englishers. How they torture their prisoners. Aah, it is a tale to turn your blood cold …”