Several nominations and awards for his first published short story collection had to have pleased Uwem Akpan, but his fortunes literally came gushing in when Say You’re One of Them (Oprah’s Book Club)
was selected by Oprah Winfrey for her book club earlier this year (2009).
Akpan was born in Ikot Akpan Eda, in southern Nigeria. He is the son school teachers who grew up, did most of his village mates, speaking English and his mother tongue, Annang. That is where his conformity stopped. He was ordained a Jesuit Priest after completing studies at the Catholic University of Eastern Africa in Nairobi, Kenya, studied Humanities at Campion House, a scholarly Jesuit community attached to Creighton University, and pursued philosophy at Gonzaga University in Washington State for two years.
In 2001, Akpan returned to the United States to cap off his education with
a MFA degree in creative writing from the University of Michigan. He is presently teacher at a seminary in Zimbabwe.
Say You’re One of Them (Oprah’s Book Club)
is a collection of short stories are windows into contemporary Africa today for children in some of the most trying situations: living on the street, child trafficking, genocide, and ethnic cleansing. The characters are children, but the stories are written for adults, not that Father Akpan uses any vulgar language or flaunts sex, but he brings you into their very shocking lives. The title of the collection is not a title from one of the short stories, but if you Say You’re One of Them as you read, you will experience life in a very different way than you ever imagined. Even though I have seen a lot in Africa in my 25 years there, Akpan, thourgh mostly first person narratives (one unique second person piece) gave me a taste of danger and vulnerability that I had never known at such a deep level.
This should be a ‘must read’ for every politician, professor, mover and shaker, even every compassionate human being. “To see, to feel, to hear, to smell and to touch” the world of these children may compel us to do something so that other children will not find themselves in similar circumstances.
Akpan was taken by the plight of street children in Nairobi when he was at seminary there. “An Ex-Mass Feast” is the first story in the collection and his first work to find print when it was published in the New Yorker in 2005. “An Ex-Mass Feast” has been posted, in its entirety, on Akpan’s official website. Give it a read. I am confident you will want to buy the collection.
“Say You’re One of Them is a bold attempt to enlighten readers about children in Africa, fueled by a passionate desire to create a safer place for children all over the world,” says the Most Reverend Camillus Etokudoh, in the Afterword.
The Oprah’s Book Club edition of Say You’re One of Them comes complete with a short Reading Group Guide and interview with Akpan.
This is just the beginning of the career of who I think will be one of Africa’s great creative writers, in fact Akpan might have already achieved literary greatness.