June 20, 2010 · 15 Comments
San Francisco (Somalilandpress) – Somali novelist, Nadifa Mohamed, debuted novel won the Betty Trask Prize ($15,000), which is administrated by Society of the Authors in Britain. In her debut novel, Black Mamba Boy, Nadifa Mohamed chronicles her father’s extraordinary journey across Africa and to England. Betty Trask award prize usually is awarded to first novels written by authors under the age of 35.
Black Mamba Boy is biographical depiction of Nadifa Mohamed’s father childhood and his journey through many countries in East Africa, Yemen and all the way to England. Jama, the protagonist of the novel is a ten-year-old boy, who decides to leave Somaliland to Aden in Southern Yemen to earn more money after his mother passed away unexpectedly. In Aden Jama decides to spend what he earned working in streets of Aden doing odd jobs to find his never-seen father. The rumors that travel along clan lines report that his father is a driver for the British army somewhere in the North. So begins an epic journey by foot that will take Jama through war-torn Eritrea and Sudan, to Egypt, Palestine and finally to the dreamy realms of Britain that he had heard about in Aden and Hargeysa.
In his travels, Jama witnesses scenes of great humanity and brutality; he will be caught up in the indifferent, grinding machine of colonial wars in Africa. By camels’ carnival, by train, by truck but mainly by foot Jama crisscross the Red Sea towns and cities in search of working papers and a ship. He slings himself from one perilous city to another, fiercely enjoying life on the road and relying on his vast clan network to shelter him and point the way to his father, who always seems just a day or two out of reach.
Black Mamba Boy is a vibrant celebration of Nadifa’s family own history. But also it is valuable dedication and effort to document astonishing journeys of many Somali men, who crossed oceans to settle in remote and unfamiliar parts of the world. Somaliland migrant community is one of earliest African communities to settle in England working as semen and the shipyards.
The novel also touches on the brutal war that has forced Nadifa’s family and millions other Somalis out of the country. Like Jama’s incredible journey against mounting odds to find his root and father, the narrative of the story symbolizes yearning for a fatherland, a birthplace that gives one an identity and history. It is a story of immigrant family who is looking back to reassemble its own history through cross-section between personal narrative, memory and world history and politics. Like many other immigrant stories, the story of Jama is also a tale to bridge gab between generations.
Nadifa Mohamed, who is also nominated for the prestige Orange award for fiction, is working on her second novel provisionally entitled Milk and Peace. She was born in Hargeisa in 1981. She left Hargeisa when she was five years old at the break of the civil war. Mohamed is educated in the UK, studying History and Politics at St Hilda’s College, Oxford. She will take part in Hargeysa International Book Fair during this summer, which organized by the Somali Arts and Culture Organization, Kayd and redsea-online.com.
Here is a short video interview with novelist Nadifa Mohamed.
June 20th, 2010
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Well done sister Nadifa.
Im proud of a new generation who might not have struggled like the ones before butwho had the pride to narrate the past
Hoping there willl be many more like u nadifa!!!!
i'm proud of Ms Nadifa and congratulating for her achevements,, this is the begining of new somali generation that will be part of history.
Congratulations Nadifa, your story is very inspiring and many people not only from Somaliland but black Africa will relate to the story of your father. My own uncle was one of those children who went to Aden, later to become Somali seamen and traveled throughout EU, Middle East, Africa (north, south, east and west), Asia and Australia. The only place his ship didnt go was North and South America.
Well done
Also I want to give big shout out to Kayd and Redsea publication who took Somali literature to new levels, without them we would not have known many gifted authors like Nadifa and the many others we read on this website that they presented.
Please continue your hard work and yes support Hargeisa Book Club. It's all about education but I want to recommend all of them to also focus on Children books that cover Somali stories and introduce it to the West, I am sure they would love new stories and many schools would be happy to read it for little kids.
I am impressed that we are having a new emerging young generation of writers. Good job and keep it up, Nadifa.
well done keep going don’t sop and we are behand you sis
I am very proud of this young Somalilander, she wrote an amazing real story of her father’s adventure, I am personally encouraging her to wrote about the 50 years annversory of Somaliland Independent, while she mentioned Aden she is aware of what Indepence is. I mean those who was grown up in Adan is hot blooded.
Congratulations Nadifo, you've made us proud!!
oxford! good on her!
Congratulations Nadifo, It's about the time that the new generation of Somalilanders to show that they different from the oral society of (maxaad sheegtay or bal warran) and start writing.
Congrats to the lady, I wonder how even one person didn't notice this blunder title which reads Somaliland novelist, what is that? does it mean Somaliland is a novelist or what?, it should read ' Somalilander novelist'… don't bother the English if you can't write it, use your own language which is by the way more beneficial to the receiving end who are the Somali people or call them Somalilanders what ever you want…
welll done sis keep going
Just knowing that you wrote the book itself was quite liberating !
Keep us proud and i mean it.