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![]() ![]() Stick with ‘the man,’ however, and you should be fine, for he (as well as his book-addict “teacher”) will tell you the blatant truth: “If you come near people here, they will ask you, what about you? “You may be tempted to stray because this character-driven narrative has a couple of perspective switches and some brief philosophical meanderings that will, at first, seem daunting. This novel is about the dung of life, and so it is not surprising that no words are minced: “Left-hand fingers in their careless journey from a hasty anus sliding up the banister as their owners returned from the lavatory downstairs to the offices above. ![]() ![]() In addition, it is an attempt to broadcast the voice of Ghana that was usually unheard: that of the poor–in most cases uneducated–village workers. The novel is seriocomic, a satirical attempt at showcasing the irony of Nkrumah’s leadership (and if you are familiar with Ghana during the Nkrumah years, you see why this is ironic indeed). This is Armah’s first novel added to Heinemann’s African Writers Series, and I am so glad that I have read and reread it. “The Beautiful Ones Are Not Yet Born” is a hard-to-avert prophecy from a lamenting patriotic seer and ink bender who sits on the tallest African tree. ![]() Fatoumatta: Ghanian author Ayi Kwei Armah is not only a legend but one of the best ink molders of all time. ![]()
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