Renowned novelist, poet, playwright, and literary critic Ngũgĩ wa
Thiong'o was a student at a prestigious, British-run boarding school
near Nairobi when the tumultuous Mau Mau Uprising for independence and
Kenyan sovereignty gripped his country. While he enjoyed scouting trips
and chess tournaments, his family home was razed to the ground and his
brother, a member of the insurgency, was captured by the British and
taken to a concentration camp. But Ngũgĩ could not escape history, and
eventually found himself jailed after a run in with the forces of
colonialism.
Ngũgĩ richly and poignantly evokes the experiences that would transform
him into a world-class writer and, as a political dissident, a moral
compass to us all. A winning celebration of the implacable determination
of youth and the power of hope, here is a searing account of the history
of a man--and the story of a nation.