The Impatient
A Novel
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- 9,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A powerful, heartrending, and insightful novel of a trio of women in Cameroon who dare to rebel against oppressive, long-held cultural traditions—including polygamy and domestic abuse—that define and limit their lives.
Three women, three stories, three linked destinies . . .
In North Cameroon, well-to-do young Ramla is torn from her true love and wed to a manipulative older man. Safira, her co-wife, juggles envy and empathy for this new bride with disappointment in the husband she desperately loves. Like her older sister, Ramla, Hindou is married off to a man she does not know or want, a distant cousin whose instability and violence terrifies her.
From an early age, these women were raised to submit to men, or risk shame and repudiation of themselves and their families. They are advised to have munyal—patience. They are told that their fates are the will of the All-Powerful, and that it is unthinkable—or rather, impossible—to defy tradition. They are reminded of the Fulani proverb which holds, “At the end of patience, there is the sky.”
Yet Ramla, Safira, and Hindou are tired of waiting for a happiness that may never come. Their lives are driven by impatience and clouded by the suffering rooted in forced marriage and physical abuse, but it is this oppressive culture that binds them together. In a society that demands female obedience, how will these three impatient women free themselves?
Djaïli Amadou Amal makes her literary debut in English with this remarkable novel that breaks taboos as it denounces the cultural mores of Africa's Sahel region. Inspired by the author’s own experiences and written with grace, strength, and veracity, The Impatient is a moving testimony to a shared pain and a call for change—an unflinching depiction of the psychic damage traditions can have on the women who must abide by them and a denunciation of violence against all women and the normalization of domestic abuse—not only in Cameroon but around the globe.
Translated from the French by Emma Ramadan
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cameroonian writer Amal's English-language debut follows the fates of three women who are forced into polygamy as teenage girls. Ramla, at 17, longs to break out of her insular compound in northern Cameroon to attend university and become a pharmacist. Films from the West and Bollywood help embolden her, and she plans to marry her brother's best friend, who would allow her to continue her studies, but she's betrothed against her will to Alhadji Issa, an older politician who supports her male family members' interests. Ramla's older sister Hindou is made to marry an alcoholic man who beats and rapes her, and Amal implies he may take other wives as well. After Ramla's marriage to Alhadji, she faces further hardships from Alhadji's first wife of 20 years, Safira, who sabotages Ramla out of fear. Once Safira realizes she's gone too far, she and Ramla talk candidly for the first time about their situation. Though the two women's interaction offers glimmers of hope, for the most part Amal unleashes a relentless litany of the horrors that the women face in marriage, as the women's relatives blame them for their husbands' poor tempers and unfaithfulness. The story feels incomplete, as it concentrates almost exclusively on the women's troubles without further developing the characters. This provides a stark and unflinching view of an oppressive culture, though as fiction it falls short.