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Wrestling with the Devil

A Prison Memoir

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A New York Times Editors' Choice
"A welcome addition to the vast literature produced by jailed writers across the centuries . . . [a] thrilling testament to the human spirit."
—Ariel Dorfman, The New York Times Book Review
"Wrestling with the Devil is a powerful testament to the courage of Ngũgĩ and his fellow prisoners and validation of the hope that an independent Kenya would eventually emerge."

Minneapolis Star Tribune
"The Ngũgĩ of Wrestling with the Devil called not just for adding a bit of color to the canon's sagging shelf, but for abolition and upheaval."
Bookforum
An unforgettable chronicle of the year the brilliant novelist and memoirist, long favored for the Nobel Prize, was thrown in a Kenyan jail without charge

Wrestling with the Devil, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o's powerful prison memoir, begins literally half an hour before his release on December 12, 1978. In one extended flashback he recalls the night, a year earlier, when armed police pulled him from his home and jailed him in Kenya's Kamĩtĩ Maximum Security Prison, one of the largest in Africa. There, he lives in a prison block with eighteen other political prisoners, quarantined from the general prison population.

In a conscious effort to fight back the humiliation and the intended degradation of the spirit, Ngũgĩ—the world-renowned author of Weep Not, Child; Petals of Blood; and Wizard of the Crow—decides to write a novel on toilet paper, the only paper to which he has access, a book that will become his classic, Devil on the Cross.

Written in the early 1980s and never before published in America, Wrestling with the Devil is Ngũgĩ's account of the drama and the challenges of writing the novel under twenty-four-hour surveillance. He captures not only the excruciating pain that comes from being cut off from his wife and children, but also the spirit of defiance that defines hope. Ultimately, Wrestling with the Devil is a testimony to the power of imagination to help humans break free of confinement, which is truly the story of all art.

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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2018

      This masterly work by Ngũgĩ (literature, Univ. of California, Irvine; Weep Not, Child) recounts his year in a Kenyan prison. Ngu~gi~ was heavily involved in the writing and production of a play, working with local residents, which may have been one of the highest points of his active literary career, only to find what came next. While living in Uhuru Kenyatta's postcolonial Kenya, the police came to Ngu~gi~'s home and then imprisoned him without a fair trial. This full account of his life as a political prisoner during the late 1970s rivals many better known-prison memoirs. Determined from the beginning of his confinement not to let his brain "turn to mush," the author begins a novel, after being told by a jailer not to write, often penning his words on accumulated pieces of toilet paper. His goal is to compose a story about Kenya and its political corruption, in his native language of Kikuyu. VERDICT Through this incredibly vivid account, one can learn much about Kenyan colonial and postcolonial history. For all readers who want to understand better issues of injustice.--Amy Lewontin, Northeastern Univ. Lib., Boston

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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