Family feuds, social hypocrisy, gender bias, and sexuality are just a handful of the themes covered in Elnathan John’s impressive Nigerian graphic novel “On Ajayi Crowther Street.”
The story revolves around people living on said street, which forms a microcosm of Lagos and Nigeria on the whole. Everybody has their secrets, which give rise to rumours – some of it true, some false. The Pastor Akpoborie’s son, Godstime, struggles to come out to the world, his sister Keturah wonders how to disclose her pregnancy to her family, and their maid Kyauta hides a big secret that has big consequences.
It's not easy to pull of a novel like this and in the graphic format. John covers a huge cross-section of Lagos society through all the characters. And most of them individually represent a certain idea or attitude. Godstime and his best friend and love interest stand for homosexuality and the way it is perceived (with derision and denial). Mary is the liberal-minded, single girl who doesn’t have much of a social circle but is perhaps the strongest voice of reason. The Pastor Akpoborie is the model of goodness with his upholding of religious virtues, and so on.
The social critique is biting and the imagery serves to emphasise it more. Nothing is what it seems and John peels back the layers one by one as the story progresses to reveal the core of it all. There are a lot of issues addressed within this small space – from child labour to hypocritical attitudes to religious fanaticism to homophobia. John has written large parts of the book in Naija or Nigerian Pidgin, which lends it a sharp authenticity and sense of place. The illustrations are colourful and vibrant, bringing life on Ajayi Crowther Street alive. The book itself moves at a very fast clip, and I couldn't put it down.
While the street itself is fictional, the stories are not. We have a Pastor Akpoborie or a Godstime walking among us everywhere.
I read this book on Scribd. Highly recommended read.