Friday, February 27, 2015

Game, Set & Match

A combined volume of three separate but related stories: “Berlin Game,” “Mexico Set” and “London Match.” In Game, a well-placed British mole working in East Berlin (as Brahms Four) is rescued to London. At the same time a Russian mole working in London Central (Fiona) is flushed out by her husband but manages to escape to Moscow, where she is given Soviet citizenship and the rank of KGB colonel.

Set and Match are about a plan by Fiona to destabilize the British intelligence agency London Central: A KGB official (Stinnes) is dressed up so that London Central would wish to enroll him. On getting to London he is to act sick, yet refuse medical examination (to avoid going through rigorous interrogation). At that time false evidence are manufactured to the effect that one senior official in London Central (Bret) is a second Russian mole. Stinnes is to give supporting evidence. In Set, Fiona’s husband Bernard is suspected to be a Russian agent like his wife. Fiona arranges certain events to frame him (including getting him a Russian passport) but he puts up a good fight. They want him to enrol Stinnes to prove his loyalty, and he gets this done. In Match, Stinnes tries to wreck havoc in London. When Bernard gets wind of evidence to suggest the existence of a second Russian mole in London, everything points to Bret, and even London Central people get him under house arrest. But luckily, Bernard realizes the true purpose of Stinnes and gets him immediately sent back to the Russians to avoid further damage, in exchange for his friend Werner who is under arrest in East Berlin.

Bernard is quite an interesting character in the tales, in that he didn’t go to college and started working after high school. At 40 he had more on-the-job experience than the graduates who worked with him and got the jobs he should have gotten.

The Famished Road

This is a fantastic tale of black people, and Nigerians in particular. It is a detailed account of poverty with a poetic rendition. It is African folklore with an English dressing. It is the tale of Azaro, an ogbanje boy who has decided to remain in the real world rather than returning to the spirit world, the numerous delegations sent by his spirit friends to get him to return, and his fights to stay.

It is about Azaro’s poor parents, a once-beautiful mother who has to hawk little provisions come rain or sun to make a living, and a father that has to work as a laborer carrying weights that could make a man’s neck bend: their suffering, quarels with landlords, celebrations and sadness. It is a story about political struggles and life in the ghetto of a Nigerian city that was probably Lagos, in the fifties before the onset of independence. It is a long tale with many messages and a great promise at the end.


Thursday, February 26, 2015

Farnham’s Freehold

This old novel (copyrighted 1964) is an unusual sort of sci-fi. It not only deals with time travel on earth but also deals a blow to the issue of racism, where one race puts itself above all others.

It starts with 20th century USA, in the home of Hugh Farnham. There are six adults, five whites (Hugh, his wife, son, daughter and her female friend) and one black servant Joe, a college student. Just as world War III takes off, they move into Hugh’s bomb shelter underground. One final atomic bomb hits the vicinity of the home, displacing them in time by about two thousand years.

They crawl out of the shelter not to meet destruction but what looks like virgin semi-tropical land. For months they survive on the land, gardening and hunting and fishing. When the two young ladies announce they are pregnant, with conception presumably before the bomb attack, it is mostly received as good news, as it would “broaden” the gene pool of the human race. Or so they think. They are assuming they are the only humans alive.

Shortly after the tragic loss of one of the ladies (Hugh’s daughter) during prolonged labor, followed by the unhealthy baby the next day, the story takes a new turn. Our survivors are visited by other people, arriving in what looks like a spaceship. It turns out the Farnham clan had been trespassing on these people’s land. The Farnhams are taken prisoners without a fight, as these new people have superior technology that would have made any effort to fight back tantamount to suicide.

In this new world, black people reign supreme and pure whites are genetically-controlled slaves. Blacks are the “Chosen” and so formerly-lowly Joe is automatically given preferential treatment and accepted as one of them, while Hugh and the rest of his family are enslaved. Hugh is made a special servant, to translate the books he’d stocked in the bomb shelter into the new language of the people, a language that seems to him to have roots in African and Asian languages of his time. He tries in the process to piece together what had happened to the world he used to know.

And just as black readers might start enjoying the sudden elevation of their race, we are given yet another jolt. The rulers are cannibals! They consider whites as low as animals, and get them bred and fattened for meat euphemistically called “pork,” along with pigs! This discovery by Hugh lead him to plan for escape with his new family of three (his daughter’s friend and their twin boys) to the mountains where the ”savages” live free of slavery. (His wife and son have gone “native,” being treated like pets in the master’s house and would have nothing to do with him.)

Hugh’s plan is short-lived; they are caught before they could even leave the premises. They are taken back to a period of captivity, at the end of which they are given some difficult options to choose from. None of the options suit them, so then rather than have them killed, the lord of the mansion sends them back to their own time, back to 20th Century USA on the night of the bombing. Or so it seems...

In the final moments, Hugh has to contemplate the issue of racism, later with his new wife. Hugh has earlier recalled a place called Pernambuco where the rich plantation owners were French-educated blacks and the servants and field hands mostly white. And hear this: ‘But Hugh knew that the situation was still more confused. Many Roman citizens had been “black as the ace of spades” and many slaves of the Romans had been as blond as Hitler wanted to be—so any “white man” of European ancestry was certain to have a dash of Negro blood. Sometimes more than a dash. That southern Senator, ... the one who had built his career on “white supremacy” ... had had many transfusions—and his blood type was such that the chances were two hundred to one that its owner had not just a touch of the tar brush but practically the whole tar barrel.’ (page 297)

Their eventual conclusion: Racism and abuse of power has nothing to do with color. Anyone can do it.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

The Man Who Came In From the Back of Beyond

You won’t get the full message of this very interesting novel until the very end. The setting is Nigeria of the 70’s, the heroes and heroines each surviving the harsh life of poverty through unbelievable feats. But it is only at the end that we realize it is actually a fiction about a fiction. The Man in the title is Lakemf, a teenage boy in a boarding school who with a friend were in the habit of stealing things from their school either for resale or for consumption. Came In From the Back of Beyond refers to the dramatic change in Lakemf after a day spent with Maude, one of his teachers, listening to his tales of difficult childhood as well as reading a manuscript he was supposed to have written, which was supposed to have been a true life account.

The stories highlighted a lot of bad things in Nigerian society like juvenile delinquency and crime, prostitution, drug trafficking and consumption, and so on, as well as social problems like discrimination and corruption. It also gave some strong arguments for and against religion, and it would be the first time I’d read a Nigerian author argue (through a fictional character) against religion and God as represented by Christianity.

The first story was about Maude himself supposedly; how his mother had been a prostitute on account of being young and in a city all by herself, after her relations abandoned her on account of her family being killed in a fire caused by enemy political thugs. Then the mother had died when he was a teenager, and he had to turn to criminal gangsterism to survive. Somewhere along the line a companion of his was caught and lynched by a mob, and he got injured in an auto accident. Then a good Samaritan came along, offered him a job and he had his break in life, furthering his education and so on.

The other story was in the manuscript, about Bozo, his ex-girlfriend’s first boyfriend. Bozo, who was rejected by the society in the form of his father and his Christian school, turned to drugs after a terrible incident that destroyed his father and his sister. Then he decided that the answer was social revolution, and started mobilizing people to turn against the government. But his life ended in the struggle.

Lakemf was so moved after listening to all this. The fact that Maude finally told him they were actually fictional didn’t matter as he decides to turn a new leaf, rather than contributing to the rot in the society.


Dead Famous

This thrilling story features a reality TV show called “House Arrest” with ten contestants that get to nominate each other for eviction until a final winner emerges. Weeks into the show one of the contestants is murdered in the toilet and the cops are called in. The investigation goes on without any arrest while the show goes on, pulling in millions for the owner like hell fire. Little clues turn up and as the show approaches ending it looks like the killer may go scot free.

But then, piecing together some little clues and with inspiration from Shakespeare, the lead cop finally traps the killer into confession on the very night of the last show. And the killer turns out to be not the contestants as most people had set their minds on, but the show owner and director herself, whose motive for the murder was the money the controversy and interest in the show would bring in.


Second-Class Citizen

This is the story of an ambitious Nigerian Igbo girl in the fifties and sixties who had an early dream of going to England. She had to fight to be allowed to attend primary school, being a girl, and when her father died she had to work as a servant for an uncle. She fought her way to secondary school through a scholarship, but after that she realized she had to get married just to have a home. She chose an over-indulged young man to marry and that was the greatest mistake she made. The man was lazy, had a low opinion of women, and expected her to work while he studied and watched TV. Her dream of going to the UK was realized, but their marriage fell to pieces.

The title is a reference to the way black people were discriminated at in England at that time. Ada was surprised by it all and learned very quickly that white people were not all the saints they’d appeared to be as missionaries in Nigeria, that there were good and bad white people just as there were good and bad black people.

I had the impression that the heroine was too young for the sort of roles and responsibilities she got in the story after arrival in England. The author’s sense of humor shows clearly in the story and personally a lot of the situations reminded me of personal experiences, like Ada’s having to work as a servant when her father died, and Francis’ ordering his children to speak only English.


Monday, February 23, 2015

1984

At the time it was written, it is the story of a time after the third world war, a future in which three equally-powerful nations (Oceania, Eastasia and Eurasia) rule the world and are constantly fighting each other for more territory. The setting is within London in one of these nations, Oceania. In Oceania as in the other two nations, a small minority (members of The Party) have absolute power over the majority (referred to as proles).

In this society, Big Brother is the personification of The Party. Most citizens are constantly under the watchful eyes of Big Brother, via hidden tape recorders or telescreens in homes that broadcast propaganda and life-controlling programs as well as pass on activities of citizens, especially party members. The English language is about to become extinct, to be replaced by an invention called Newspeak which exterminates all references to science, humanity, self-determination, individuality, etc. In this society, people (that is, Party members) are only allowed to think and act the way The Party wants them to. Any deviation is labeled a crime, punishable by extermination or labor prison, after being mentally abused through all sorts of severe torture. Love between couples is regarded as bad, kids are trained to report on their parents, marriage is arranged solely for the purpose of producing babies for the party, while sex is about to become extinct. The past is constantly being rewritten, to eliminate any references to “vaporized” persons, ensure the party’s predictions match present realities, and so on. The Party controls the past as well as the present, and reality is what The Party calls it.

It is in this society that Winston and Julia find themselves. Winston recognizes the contradictions within the society, questions the authority and righteousness of The Party. He finds an ally in Julia, a girl who loves sex for the joy of it. Secretly he’s started a diary, and gradually realizes that The Party must be destroyed for the humanity of its members to be restored. But unfortunately for him, he picks the wrong Party person for a confidant, O’Brien, a powerful thought-policeman that he should have avoided like the plague. O’Brien had been setting him up for a good seven years, so that shortly after he confided in him, he and Julia are both arrested, to be released only after a long period of mind-altering torture and manipulation. The story ends rather sadly, in the sense that the evil The Party represents appears to have the upper hand.


Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Violence

This is a very moving story about love and courage in the face of extreme poverty. It starts with an argument between Idemudia and Adisa, a very poor couple, about the man’s poverty and the lack of food to eat. In their argument Adisa threatens to be seeing other men and he in turn threatens to kill her if he finds out. It is raining but he is driven out in search of work. He and his friends get a job offloading cement for a wealthy woman (Queen). At the end of the day of working in the rain he gets home and collapses. Adisa had gone to see her aunt about their quarrel but when she returns and finds her husband sick it becomes obvious that she didn’t mean what she’d threatened him with and couldn’t bear to leave her husband. Idemudia has to be taken to a hospital but there is no money to pay the bills.

The rest of the story is then about Adisa’s ordeals in getting money. Queen’s husband promises to help her but then forces her to have sex with him first. When Idemudia is discharged Queen offers him work at her construction site. When the workers want to go on strike Queen attempts to divide them by first appointing Idemudia foreman for the first time, then tried to seduce him. Idemudia refuses to be tempted by money or sex so Queen throws her secret knowledge at him—that his own wife had slept with her husband. Idemudia rushes home in anger with the thought of killing Adisa. He starts to strangle her but finally realizes that she’d done it as a sacrifice for him, just as he himself sometimes sold his blood for money.

Built around this plot is a critical look at the injustices of the Nigerian society, a society in which the majority of its citizens are jobless, poor and uneducated, a society of abject poverty alongside stinking ill-gotten wealth. When people are driven to a corner by poverty they may have no other recourse than violence in order to stay alive, and should then not be blamed.


Sunday, February 15, 2015

The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born

This is a novel of more thoughts than action. The thoughts are those of an unnamed man about corruption in society in Ghana right after independence, about the deceit of the politicians who began by telling the people the white men had to leave, only to get there and squander the riches of the land in imitation of the lifestyles of the white people, about the deceived mass of people living in poverty, about corruption in his own place of work. The simple plot begins with this man in a bus on his way to work. The man is followed to his boring job and then home where his wife calls him a fool for turning down a bribe at the office. He walks out in the night and goes to a solitary friend for comfort.

His classmate now a minister is living like a king and his wife and her mother are impressed. The minister promises the ladies a boat and ends up actually owning the boat but having them sign the papers. Then there is a military coup and the honorable minister runs to them a wanted man, stinking of fear. The main character rushes to his aid without thinking and assists him to escape through the latrine at the backyard to the boatman’s house. The escaping man promises the boatman part-ownership of the boat to have him take him to Abidjan where his wife’s relations live. As the main man is walking back home he looks at a bus and notices the inscription on the body, The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born.


Friday, February 13, 2015

The Eleventh Commandment

Thou shalt not be caught. This is the 11th commandment for agents of the CIA. Unfortunately for Connor Fitzgerald, a high-ranking agent, his last mission before retirement—the assassination of a Colombian presidential candidate unfavorable to American interests—raised some dust in the US presidency. This is because the President did not sanction it. It was ordered by Helen Dexter, the director of the CIA who was pursuing her own personal agenda. In spite of her denial, the assassination was traced to the CIA. To cover her back, she plans to eliminate him, seeing him as the only person that could expose her. So she sends him on another mission under pretense that it was sanctioned by the president, this time to Russia, and does all her best to ensure that Connor does not return alive.

This time the mission is to assassinate the Russian presidential candidate. Halfway through, she exposes him and he is caught, imprisoned, tried and is about to be hanged. Through the Russian mafia, he escapes the hangman, thanks to a friend that decides to give up his own life for him. Now the mafia wants him to still carry out the assassination of their presidential candidate. The Russian candidate is elected and decides to visit the US. Connor trails him there for a very interesting climax and conclusion.

It was depressing to read that the hero, Connor Fitzgerald, had died in hospital, after his friend Chris Jackson sacrificed his own life so he could live. It was like a waste of the CIA’s two top talents just because the heartless woman at the top wanted to save her job. But then after his presidential burial, a surprising twist is thrown in just before the last page. Connor had not died after all, but had taken a new identity for security reasons. To end the tale, six months after he was supposedly buried, he makes a sudden appearance to his wife living abroad in Australia, bearing this new identity.


Thursday, February 12, 2015

Prisoners of Jebs

This is a series of articles that originally was published weekly in a newspaper. Using a hypothetical prison off the coast of Nigeria and initially built and financed by Nigerians, the author paints a satirical picture of social and political events in Africa in general and Nigeria in particular. The prisoners were supposed to have come from all over Africa, to put heads together to find solutions to Africa’s problems. But no sooner than they were settled this objective seemed forgotten as the prison gradually took on the look of Nigerian society.
Some of the characters could be likened to real people and events in Nigeria between 1985 and ’86, like Joromi the Kangaroo who represented ‘kangaroo courts’ (probably tribunals), Professor who resembled Prof. Wole Soyinka and Madam Kokane (cocaine pushers). Towards the end the director of the prison wanted to secede from Nigeria due to the evils going on there, while the Nigerians wanted to bomb the prison out of existence, as a perceived threat to their head of state. But it was magical Professor who conjured up an earthquake that sunk the prison without a trace except for one survivor (himself), robbing the Nigerian Navy of the taste of victory.

It was interesting reading till after the middle of the book. Then the author’s sarcasm seemed to get in the way. At the end you are sort of left wondering what exactly was the core message of the book, apart from the entertainment value.


Arrows of Rain

This story is a bit about the colonial past and more about the bad leadership of corruption and human rights abuses of Nigeria's recent past. It is about Nigeria not in name but in context and peoples.
The story starts at B. Beach in Laga, Federal Republic of Madia (reminiscent of the Lagos Bar Beach in Nigeria) on New Year Day of 1988, with the naked drowned body of a woman. In government a military dictator is in power, Gen. Isa Palat Bello. A man at the scene (Bukuru), someone presumed mad from his unkempt appearance and making a home at the beach, tells the police that the woman had been raped by soldiers at dawn. Because soldiers are in power, this gets him locked up on trumped up charges of being the rapist and murderer. In court Bukuru repeats that soldiers had raped the woman who then chose to run into the water when he attempted to help her. And when he declares that Isa Palat Bello once raped and murdered a woman named Iyese, hell is let loose. Having been declared sane by a psychiatrist, another one is procured to examine him, but with a forced order to return a verdict of madness. Bukuru in a maximum security prison (reminiscent of the one at Kirikiri in Lagos) decides to tell his story to one particular reporter. The majority of the book is Bukuru’s tale, the account of how he fell in love with Iyese, a woman forced into prostitution by society, then deserted her when she needed him most, afraid that the violent Isa Bello whom she’d been seeing would come after him with guns.

It is a tragedy, in which the narrator, a journalist, finds out that the supposedly mad man arrested by the police was in fact his biological father, from the man’s written account which he unwittingly chose the journalist to be ‘the voice.’ It was in fact the birth of the journalist (Ogugua but renamed Femi on adoption) that caused Ogugua to abandon his life as a newspaper editor for that of a beach-dwelling unkempt Bukuru, his mobid fear of Bello the soldier that murdered Ogugua’s mother after she told him he was not the father of the boy, a fear made worse once Bello was catapulted to the leadership position of the land after a coup.

An interesting twist in the story is the use of Sheri as the name of the narrator’s girlfriend, a lady he intended to marry until she fell to the wishes of her parents not to marry someone who didn’t know the ‘source of his genes.’ Sheri’s ‘lilting’ voice in the story sounded like the real-life Sheri Fafunwa I used to know (now married to the author). Another interesting aspect is the use of traditional stories and sayings of old times, told now by grandmothers.


A Raisin in the Sun

A play about the fighting black American pride and morality amidst poverty, with a touch of colonial African identity. The Youngers are sixth (Travis the grandson), fifth (Walter and sister Beneatha the children) and fourth (Lena the mother) generation black Americans. The old couple have worked hard amidst biting poverty so that the two kids can have a better life, but with their dreams of achieving more in life constantly being deferred. Beneatha in college now wants to be a doctor, while Walter, married with a son, dreams of leaving his lowly chauffeur job and starting a business.

The long-awaited dead dad’s insurance check for $10,000 finally arrives. What should be done with it? Should the mother of the family, the widow of the man, splash it on herself as dreamily contemplated by her daughter-in-law Ruth? Or should Walter have it all for his business dream? The wise woman buys a house, sensing the imminent collapse of her family, but in a white neighborhood. After making a down payment of $3,500, she finally decides to trust her protesting son to deposit $3,000 in a bank for Beneatha’s schooling, and then manage the rest as he deemed fit, like the head of the family and the man of the house he ought to be. But then Walter gives all the $6,500 to a business colleague. The family receives a crushing blow on hearing that this person has vanished with the money.

Now what should they do? Lena begins considering giving up the new house. And Walter makes a sudden attempt to give up the cherished family pride, by accepting a pay-off from the white people that didn’t want them moving in. But with the family strongly against this, he finally makes the right choice for them to overcome their crisis and positively move on.


Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Moonwalk

Moonwalk by Michael Jackson is autobiographical, spanning the period from childhood to the release of his third solo album Bad. His first solo album was Off the Wall, which was followed by the best-selling album of all time, Thriller.

Throughout the book, the theme that recurs are those of hard work (practice, practice and practice), perfectionism, spreading love among the races and being in control of his career and life, along with his love for privacy and being a privately shy person. While not admitting trying to look whiter he saw the plastic surgery he undertook (nose and chin jobs) as normal practice in the entertainment business.

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Long Walk to Freedom

This memorable book is a summary of the life of one of Africa’s greatest leaders, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, from his childhood to his education and career and his fight for the political emancipation of non-European peoples of South Africa, majority of them black Africans.

Long Walk to Freedom
Contents:

Part One:A Country Childhood
Part Two: Johannesburg
Part Three: Birth of a Freedom Fighter
Part Four: The Struggle Is My Life
Part Five: Treason
Part Six: The Black Pimpernel
Part Seven: Rivonia
Part Eight: Robben Island: The Dark Years
Part Nine: Robben Island: Beginning to Hope
Part Ten: Talking with the Enemy
Part Eleven: Freedom