Necessary Fiction
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- CHF 18.00
Beschreibung des Verlags
‘A vital work for our times’ IRENOSEN OKOJIE
'Radical, gorgeous … a queer love song, honouring chosen family’ BIG ISSUE
'Beautiful … this is prose worth spending time with' MARIE CLAIRE
‘A gorgeously deeply humane book’ NICOLE DENNIS-BENN
'A vivid, stirring revolution' YRSA DALEY-WARD
‘The ink practically hovers off the page’ KAVEH AKBAR
What makes a family? How is it defined and by whom? Is freedom for everyone?
Across Lagos, a rolling cast of unforgettable characters seek out love in all its forms, daring to push all other relationships – with partners, family and friends – to the brink in the process. As they form and break unexpected connections, they reveal how they know each other, have loved each other and had their hearts broken in that pursuit.
Stubbornly alive and brazenly flawed, they work to establish themselves in the city’s worlds of art, music, entertainment and creativity while reckoning with desire, fear, death and God. Here, we witness their collective and individual attempts to grapple with the necessary fictions that they all carry for survival.
This is a shimmering, defiant cross-generational portrait of what it means to be queer in contemporary Nigeria.
'Both deeply earnest and unique' VULTURE
'Unabashedly queer, complicated and occasionally outright hopeful' NPR
'Osunde is brilliant at character, giving the cast rich, knotty backstories that unfold in bursts of revelation' TLS
‘Necessary Fiction's Nigerians are inseparable from Nigeria itself: brazen, willful, sexy, dynamic, explosive’ MARLON JAMES
'Osunde’s writing shines … It’s not just beautiful – it’s transformative’ BASSEY IKPI
About the author
Eloghosa Osunde is an award-winning writer and multidisciplinary artist. Their critically acclaimed debut novel Vagabonds! was shortlisted for the Waterstones Debut Fiction Prize and longlisted for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. They are the recipient of the Plimpton Prize for Fiction 2021, the MoAD’s African Literary Award 2023 and an ASME Award for Fiction. Their writing has been published in The Paris Review, Granta, Guernica and elsewhere. They move between Nigeria, Nairobi, New York City and wherever else their work calls. They can be found online at eloghosaosunde.com.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Osunde (Vagabonds!) takes a kaleidoscopic view of queer Nigerian life in this vibrant tale of a diverse group of friends and relatives and their internal struggles. The young Maro searches for true love while leaning on his relationship with wealthy businessman Alhaji, who's old enough to be his father. Psalm, an artist, loves his girlfriend Asang, but their relationship becomes increasingly strained after he cheats on her with the ghost of Love, an old friend who died three years earlier. Love came to him through a "side door in his mind" and now takes Psalm on trips to a Lynchian realm where others in similar relationships hang out together. Meanwhile, May talks with Aunty G, an older lesbian, about the pain of rejection by her family and her struggle with gender identity. Ultimately, she declares: "I'm not a man; I'm May. I'm not a woman; I'm May." Osunde shines in their voice-driven narration, smoothly integrating Nigerian Pidgin into the novel's crystalline prose. "I am serious about being alive," announces a young man named Ziz, who left his judgmental family behind for a new life in Lagos. "Because of this, there is nothing I can't survive. Anybody who knows me knows that; the rest na breeze." There's much to love in this bighearted novel.