“I am Binti Ekeopara Zuzu Dambu Kaipka Meduse Enyi Zinariya Osemba, master harmonizer”--Binti
The title of this, the third and final volume of the Afro-futurist science fiction trilogy by Nnedi Okorafor, refers to a specter of change that appears to significant people at times of great crisis.
At one point Okorafor glibly summarized the book: "African girl leaves home. African girl returns home. African girl becomes home."
Binti is a Master Harmonizer (peacemaker) Himba woman who, in the first volume, defied her family and left home, Namibia, to go Oomza University (in space).
The third volume begins with a violent and confrontation in space that leads to a very surprising turn of events, and a trip home for the Himba Binti, who must continue the path to discover herself and see how she can contribute to peace for her people. There are some traditions worth keeping, and some that need to change.
“I’d seen myself as broken. But couldn’t you be broken and still bring change?”
Violent confrontation is everywhere. Can we indeed find a way to reach across differences to live together? Throughout the series, there’s been a spiritual component to Binti’s science and tech-centric world. Here, the mystical and the mathematical are fully revealed as essential, and the Night Masquerade, signaling change, becomes something other than what Binti feared it might be.
As with all of her work, strange and wonderful creatures and concepts populate this world. Binti’s hair, or her tentacle‐like okuoko almost becomes a character in its own right. As a Himba, she colors her skin with the Namimbian soil, Otjize, which gives her power and beauty. Her friend Okwu, a jellyfish-like alien from a race called the Meduse — is under attack from the Khoush, Earth's dominant ethnicity and the Meduse's ancestral enemies. That Binti is friends with Okwu is unusual, and a simple but important aspect of the story.
The Night Masquerade concludes by holding Oomza University up as a shining example of an ideal society — but what makes it ideal is its diversity, its principle accommodating difference. Okorafor has two masters degrees and a doctorate in English, and has been a long time professor, so she has spent many years in the university, so one site for hope is the uni, a laboratory for learning and the development of unity:
“The way people on Oomza Uni were so diverse and everyone handled that as if it were normal continued to surprise me. It was so unlike Earth, where wars were fought over and because of differences and most couldn't relate to anyone unless they were similar.”
In the end it is partly up to Binti, with another new friend, Mwinyi, to try to prevent a war that could wipe out her people. So, Binti is sci fi/fantasy with some sci but more heart, a hopeful allegory, a coming of age story with twists and turns, well-written.