Curandera – Irenosen Okojie
#DialogueBooks
I love literary riddles. Novels that span millennia, challenging the mind with rebirths and resurrections, are firm favourites. Surrealism, magical realism, fantasy, historical fiction, mythology, horror, or the supernatural – bring them on.
The synopsis of this novel ticked all the boxes. In 17th century Verde, West Africa, the arrival of a mysterious woman, Zulmira, in the town of Gethsemane, sparks unexplained phenomena; men went temporarily blind in the afternoons, children disappeared and reappeared, and infertile women fell pregnant. There is an obvious link to a shamanic ceremony to the goddess, Oni, narrated in the opening chapter, and a jump through time to London, 2012, where a botanist, Therese, is tasked with the search for other carriers of the gifts of Oni, finding them in the persons of the Haitian musician, Azacca, the Peruvian drifter, Emilien, and the adventurous Finn.
Interesting as this might sound, the novel turned out to be one of the very few I simply could not finish. There is no character development and no reader involvement or emotion in respect of any character, as they all remain aloof strangers on the peripheral. Their actions are thus unmotivated, and mostly arbiter. Sentences and paragraphs are lengthy, often disjointed and non-consequential, ambiguous and vague, for example: “The thud echoes, snaring the twitching of octopuses carrying stars inside them, foreign signs becoming signatures into the aftermath of blood, the crack of the clay heart in the soil awaiting an impatient touch.” 168)
It came as a surprise to see that it was classified as horror by Fantastic Fiction. I missed that part completely.
This one is not for me.
⭐️ #Uitdieperdsebek