Thursday, December 7, 2023

Reading Africa Week

 Michael - Alternate Thursdays


This is Reading Africa Week, an initiative started by Catalyst Press in 2017. The idea is to promote good books of all genres from Africa. There are online interviews, panels, and discussions and lots of great book recommendations. Catalyst has focused on novels from Africa, and has published some excellent African crime novels internationally.


So what does Africa have to offer in the crime fiction/thriller genres? Basically, the answer is everything – great plots, fascinating settings, memorable characters. I’m going to try to justify that by going through some of my favorites here today. There are many, many, more, and I’d be delighted if you add your own as comments. 


I write a piece for the ITW The Big Thrill e-magazine most months titled Africa Scene in which I interview an author about her or his latest book. Almost all of the books mentioned below have been featured on Africa Scene and I’ve attached the link to the title in case you’d like to find out more about the story and its author.


So, for Reading Africa Week, why not choose something that appeals to your taste from this list and give it a go? You won’t be sorry.


Nail-biting Thrillers


Thirteen Hours by Deon Meyer

Deon Meyer is probably the best known South African crime fiction writer, and there’s good reason for that. My pick here is Thirteen Hours. This book kept me up until 3am because I had to know how it was all going to work out. 

A young American tourist is running for her life on Table Mountain overlooking Cape Town. She's being hunted by killers. She doesn’t know why, and neither do we, but she does know that she has to keep running and hiding if she wants to stay alive. The police know she’s missing but have no clues. It’s a hectic race to the finish.


Easy Motion Tourist by Leye Adenle

Leye Adenle's series features Amaka – a most unusual lady in Lagos, Nigeria. She’s made it her business to help protect prostitutes from the violence that leads to multiple female deaths, mostly from their clients, and most of which are ignored by the police. But there are other things going on, and Amaka and her boyfriend from London have a rough road ahead.


PI Thrillers

Sleeper by Mike Nicol


Mike Nicol uses sharp, short sentences for his PI thrillers. It helps set the mood and drive the tension. The private investigator in Sleeper is Fish Pescado. He’s a surfer boy in Cape Town, and his partner, Vicki, is an ex-spy with a South African spy authority, the State Security Agency. They make an unlikely but very intriguing combination. This is one of his best, balancing the PI and the spy aspects in a scary page turner.

The Missing American by Kwei Quartey

Readers of MIE know our blog-mate Kwei well, but if you haven’t read his Emma Djan series you're missing out. Start with The Missing American. It’s a twisty page-turner, delving into the dark domain of the Ghanaian internet fraudsters – the “sakawa boys”. They play their victims like game fish, but they're only part of a vicious web of corruption and witchcraft that reaches all the way to the top echelons of society. Emma has her work cut out for her in this excellent first outing.


Lightseekers by Femi Kayode

Philip Taiwo is an unusual private investigator. A psychologist with a thesis on behavior in crowds, he's tasked with finding out what happened when three students were attacked and set alight by a mob near a university in Nigeria. Lightseekers could be called a psychological thriller, but it’s really impossible to pigeonhole.


Character Mysteries


Okay, some people call them cozies. These are super, series characters linked to a good mystery that will keep you guessing.


Recipes for Love and Murder by Sally Andrew

 Tannie Maria is a delightful character, fixated on cooking, who has to give up her recipe column to become the local newspaper’s agony aunt.  She finds she has a talent for that too, but it leads her into a nasty series of murders. As a bonus, the book includes some of Tannie Maria’s most mouth-watering recipes.


Sibanda and the Rainbird by CM Elliot

Head north to Zimbabwe to meet Detective Inspector Sibanda and the team at the police station in Gubu, a fictional town near the Hwange National Park. Great characters (including Miss Daisy, their unreliable Land Rover) and a wonderful setting draw us in even before the intriguing plot does so.



Police Procedurals


Apostle Lodge
by Paul Mendelson

In Apostle Lodge a group of boys discover the body of a woman who seems to have been abused and then starved to death in an empty house.  Because of the circumstances, police detective Vaughn de Vries immediately suspects that it’s not a single crime but part of a series.  He finds it hard to attract the focus the crime deserves because a terrorist bomb blast has recently shaken Cape Town and the police are hunting for the perpetrators. As the cases progress, Vaughn finds himself sucked personally into both of them.


All Come to Dust by Bryony Rheam

All Come to Dust is a highly unusual police procedural. A woman is discovered dead in her home with a letter opener sticking out of her chest. Chief Inspector Edmund Dube goes to the scene. He immediately realizes that the victim was dead before she was stabbed as there's not enough blood. Nevertheless, the question of why she was stabbed remains. The crime is laid at the door of the recently dismissed gardener, but Edmund believes there's a lot more to it than that. However, the senior officers at the police station seem intent on thwarting his efforts to get to the bottom of the case.


Superficially, the novel seems to follow the usual tropes of the detective story genre, but as the author delves into Edmund's past, the book is rich with characterizations and subtle surprises. Nothing is as it seems.

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for thenew-to-me titles/authors. I would add James McClure and Jass MacKenzie.

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  2. Thanks, Bonnie. McClure and MacKenzie are great suggestions. McClure was really the father of SA crime fiction and certainly deserves a place here. And Jassy wrote great crime fiction. Unfortunately, she's not writing at the moment.

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