Friends With Books!

Long time, no blog! (more on that at the end of the blog post)

I never thought I’d ever make a blog post on books written by my own friends. Since 2014, I’ve been blogging about books written by Black authors I either have para-social relationships with online, or who are acquaintances. This year, three of my Ghanaian friends published their debuts, and I couldn’t be more proud of them!

#ReadGhanaian๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ญ

The Kelewele Connection by Kwatemaa Tweneboah

Synopsis

What starts out as a quick trip to the kelewele joint on campus, leads two kelewele lovers to discover a connection like no other.


Afriyie just wanted to get some kelewele to munch while she enjoyed a movie in her room but is disappointed when she doesnโ€™t get the exact kind she loves. Her disappointment turns into a pleasant impromptu โ€˜dateโ€™ with the guy who offers to share the last bit of kelewele he bought.


Nana Yaw never shares his kelewele. Never. So when he catches himself offering to do just that with the cute girl heโ€™s been spying for the past few weeks, he knows this is a connection he cannot ignore.


They donโ€™t have much time till Afriyie has to go back to resume her studies in Edinburgh but the connection they share is too strong to ignore. Will their brief time together be all they have or will their instant spark turn into something long-lasting?

One of my favorite and smartest bookish friends – Abena Kwatemaa Karikari, (or better known as @BookwormInGH on her Bookstagram and Booktube channel) wrote a book with one of her good friends – Nana Adwoa Tweneboah Amponsah-Mensah. Their joint pen name is Kwatemaa Tweneboah. These two friends love reading and writing romance and also co-host a bookish romance podcast called 2 Hearts In A Pod.

Even though Abena and Nana Adwoa separately have their work published in a number of anthologies, The Kelewele Connection is their debut self-published novel under their joint pen name. Not only will readers of romance love this book, but I have a feeling food lovers (especially plantain/kelewele lovers) will enjoying reading this novel as well!

Kwatemaa Tweneboah (Nana Adwoa on the left & Abena Kwatemaa on the right) on a panel at Pa Gya! discussing their debut, in October

The book cover is very endearing – the natural hair, the skin tones of the characters and even the bowl of spiced plantain. I’m sure Kwatemaa Tweneboah have more books up their sleeve, waiting to be published. In fact, they have a Christmas novelette in the works called A Kelewele Christmas! Stay tuned!

Purchase The Kelewele Connection on Amazon or Akenkan Books


God’s Spear by Jeffrey Bones

Synopsis

A story about God, a spear and an angel’s thirst for unruly power.

Not forgetting, the return of Earth’s greatest saviour.

Head to the first page and I’ll meet you inside.

I normally do not review or highlight religious novels – mostly because I know people of ALL religions read this book blog. No discrimination here. But I would be remiss if I didn’t highlight God’s Spear by my good friend, Jeffrey Bones. I had the privilege of reading the book back in April of this year, when it was in its final editing stages.

Jeffrey Bones at his book launch in September

Without giving away any spoilers, God’s Spear is a 60 page graphic novel that follows an angel’s quest for power via a spear. I enjoyed the dialogue between the characters, as well as the gradual rise of suspense towards the end. The writing is pretty descriptive, which allows readers to use their imagination to visualize the text and interpret the storyline through their own understanding.

God’s Spear is suitable for readers of all ages; readers who appreciate animation would especially love the illustrations in the book! As with any graphic novel, the illustrations pleasantly augment the reading experience, as we actually get a glimpse into Jeffrey Bones’ (and the illustrator’s) vision for the characters we experience.

Purchase God’s Spear by contacting Jeffrey Bones for a copy


No One Dies Yet by Kobby Ben Ben

Synopsis

A genre-breaking novel from a powerful new African voice.

2019. The Year of the Return. It has been exactly 400 years since the first slave ships left Ghana for America. Ghana has now opened its doors to Black diasporans, encouraging them to return and get to know the land of their ancestors.

Elton, Vincent, and Scott arrive from America to visit preserved sites from the transatlantic slave route, and to explore the country’s underground queer scene. Their activities are narrated by their two combative guides: Kobby, their guide to Accraโ€™s privileged circles; and Nana, the voice of tradition and religious principle.

The pair’s tense relationship sets the tone for what becomes a shocking and unsettling tale of murder that is at times funny, at times erotic, yet always outspoken and iconoclast.

Last but not least, No One Dies Yet was published in August via Europa Editions. This book has been featured in so many of my ‘New Books to Anticipate‘ posts, so we are all elated that it’s finally out in the world! It will be published in the US in February of 2024.

No One Does Yet is a big book (over 380 pages) that’s basically the embodiment of Kobby’s complex, inspiring mind. Trust and believe that as soon as I finish this book, the review will be up. From my discussions with Kobby on the inspiration behind the book, one of the ideas behind the novel is slightly akin to an article another friend of mine wrote during Ghana’s Year of Return celebrations, in 2020.

Me and Kobby with an ARC of his book, back in January

Purchase No One Dies Yet on Amazon (UK), or contact Kobby for a copy

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African Book Addict will be 10 years old in 2024! Time flies. I plan on setting up a series of posts and (maybe) events to celebrate the 10 years. Stay tuned (and keep your fingers crossed because [traditional] blogging is quite challenging nowadays).


2023 NEW RELEASES TO ANTICIPATE!

Happy New Year, everyone!

New year, new books to anticipate.

Below is my annual collage of new books to anticipate this year. Iโ€™ve compiled 102 new African, African-American, Black-Brit and Caribbean books that look very promising. Please note โ€“ this list/collage is just a snippet of books by Black authors 2023 has to offer!

MORE books to look out for in 2023:

[image via Twitter]

Hangman by Maya Binyam

The Blurb

An enthralling and original first novel about exile, diaspora, and the impossibility of Black refuge in America and beyond.

In the morning, I received a phone call and was told to board a flight. The arrangements had been made on my behalf. I packed no clothes, because my clothes had been packed for me. A car arrived to pick me up.

A man returns home to sub-Saharan Africa after twenty-six years in America. When he arrives, he finds that he doesnโ€™t recognize the country or anyone in it. Thankfully, someone recognizes him, a man who calls him brotherโ€”setting him on a quest to find his real brother, who is dying.

In Hangman, Maya Binyam tells the story of that search, and of the phantoms, guides, tricksters, bureaucrats, debtors, taxi drivers, relatives, riddles, and strangers that will lead to the truth.

It is an uncommonly assured debut: an existential journey; a tragic farce; a slapstick tragedy; and a strange, and strangely honest, story of one manโ€™s stubborn quest to find refugeโ€”in this world and in the world that lies beyond it.

To be publishedย August 2023


[image via Refinery29]

BUTCH by Kima Jones

Read about the novel here.

To be published Fall 2023


[image via WWNorton]

Innards: stories by Magogodi oaMphela Makhene

The Blurb

This incendiary debut of linked stories narrates the everyday lives of Soweto residents, from the early years of apartheid to its dissolution and beyond.

Imbued with the thrilling texture of township language and life, and uncompromising in its depiction of Black South Africa, Innards tells the intimate stories of everyday folks processing the savagery of apartheid with grit, wit, and their own distinctive, bewildering humor.

Magogodi oa Mphela Makheneโ€”who was born in apartheid-era South Africaโ€”plunges readers into an electrifying first collection filled with indelible characters. Meet a fake PhD and exโ€“freedom fighter who remains unbothered by his own duplicity, a girl who goes mute after stumbling on a burning body, and twin siblings nursing a scorching feud. Like many Americans today, Innardsโ€™ characters mirror the difficulty of navigating the shadows of a living past alongside the uncertain opportunities of the promised land.

A work of intelligence and visionโ€”flush with forgiveness, rage, ugliness, and wild beautyโ€”Innards heralds the arrival of a major new voice in contemporary fiction.

To be published May 2023


[image via Van Aggelen African Literay Agency]

The Year of Return by Ivana Akotowaa Ofori

Read about the novella here.

To be published Fall 2023


[image via Bookends]

Womb City by Tlotlo Tsamaase

The Blurb

WOMB CITY imagines a dark and deadly future Botswana, rich with culture and true folklore, which begs the question: how far must one go to destroy the structures of inequality upon which a society was founded? How far must a mother go to save the life of her child? 

Nelah seems to have it all: wealth, fame, a husband, and a child on the way. But in a body her husband controls via microchip and the tailspin of a loveless marriage, her hopes and dreams come to a devastating halt. A drug-fueled night of celebration ends in a hit-and-run. To dodge a sentencing in a society that favors men, Nelah and her side-piece, Janith Koshal, finish the victim off and bury the body.

But the secret claws its way into Nelah’s life from the grave. As her victim’s vengeful ghost begins exacting a bloody revenge on everyone Nelah holds dear, she?ll have to unravel her society’s terrible secrets to stop those in power, and become a monster unlike any other to quench the ghost’s violent thirst

To be published April 2023


[image via Iowa Writers’ Workshop]

Digging Stars by Novuyo Rosa Tshuma

Read about the novel here (and note the title change!)

To be published September 2023



What new releases are you excited about? Please do share!

Check out the new books highlighted in:

2022 | 2021 | 2020 2019 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2015


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