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The Five Sorrowful Mysteries of Andy Africa

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The Los Angeles Times Book Prizes Finalist
Shortlisted for the 2024 Betty Trask Prize
Longlisted for the 2024 Aspen Words Literary Prize

Named a Best of the Year Book by NPR

Crackling with energy and intelligence, this debut is the "
smart, subversive, funny, heartbreaking" (Kamila Shamsie) story of an exceptional teenager coming of age in the shadow of colonialism and communal violence in Nigeria.
Andrew Aziza is an unusually smart fifteen-year-old in Kontagora, Nigeria. He lives with his fiercely protective mother, Gloria, and fantasizes obsessively about white girls-especially blondes. When he's not in church, at school, or hanging about town with his droogs wishing to become one of "Africa's first superheroes," he's contemplating the larger questions with his teacher Zahrah and his equally brilliant friend Fatima, a Hausa-Fulani girl who has feelings for him. Together they discuss mathematical theorems, Black power, and what Andy has deemed the Curse of Africa.
Sure enough, the reluctantly nicknamed Andy Africa soon falls hopelessly and inappropriately in love with the first white girl he lays eyes on: Eileen. But at the church party held to celebrate her arrival, multiple crises loom. An unfamiliar man there claims, despite his mother's denials, to be Andy's father, and an anti-Christian mob has gathered, headed for the church. In the ensuing havoc and its aftermath, Andy is forced to reckon with his identity and desires and determine how to live on the so-called Cursed Continent.

The Five Sorrowful Mysteries of Andy Africa announces a dazzlingly unique literary voice. Crackling with energy, this tragicomic novel provides a stunning lens into contemporary African life, the complicity of the West, and the impossible challenges of growing up in a turbulent world.
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    • Booklist

      March 1, 2023
      Buoro's first novel is bold, honest, and fizzing with energy in its depiction of what it's like to live inside the mind of a 15-year-old boy. It's no surprise to anyone, least of all to himself, when Andrew Aziza falls in love with the first white girl he meets. Living in Northern Nigeria and contemplating the deeper mysteries of life, Andrew, who acquires the nickname Andy Africa, has concluded that Africa is cursed. When an anti-Christian mob attacks his church, tragedy strikes, and Andy must confront what it means to come of age in a chaotic and dangerous world. Buoro, recipient of the Booker Prize Foundation Scholarship, is an exciting new literary voice emphatically carving space for himself. Andy's narration is witty and sharp and ingrained with deep philosophies innocently presented. Buoro captures the essence of ""trauma laughter,"" interlacing humor with the sorrows of Andy's life and taking both his main character and the reader on an intense journey of self-discovery. This tale demands that readers keep up or get left behind.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2023
      A Black Nigerian teen has high hopes for a romance with a visiting White girl. Andrew "Andy" Aziza, the narrator of Buoro's rich debut novel, is infuriated at nearly everything in his life. His hometown, Kontagora, is prone to violent clashes between its Muslim and Catholic communities. African culture, he thinks, can't measure up to the sophistication and cool of England and the United States. (Indeed, he detests all of "this crappy continent.") He's bereft of a father and carries on conversations in his head with his stillborn brother, whom he calls Ydna. He takes some comfort in his friends and his mother, a local photographer. But in his eyes, salvation (and the religious rhetoric here runs deep, from the title on down) can only truly arrive in the form of Eileen, a niece of the local priest visiting from the U.K. It's not hard to see that disappointment is coming--and Buoro overextends the path getting there. But he doesn't lapse into easy clich�s about loving what you have. It also helps that Andy is a winning narrator, by turns self-deprecating and sardonic ("I haven't seen a blonde before. Because this is Africa. And there are -0.001 blondes here") and lyrical as well, thanks to Andy's poetry, interspersed throughout. Since Andy and Eileen's trajectory is fairly predictable, its most engaging elements involve the B-plots: the religious attacks, the difficulty of escaping the country, the surprising ways literature can spark a connection. (Eileen and Andy bond over Kafka's The Metamorphosis, which is doing a lot of symbolic work.) The title's crucifixion reference frames Andy as both a Christ figure and a comically self-martyring figure, and Buoro has an assured grasp of religious and coming-of-age themes. A promising debut that upends the typical bildungsroman.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 13, 2023
      A Nigerian Christian struggles to make sense of his loyalties amid the growing rumble of violence in Buoro’s energetic debut. Andy Aziza, 15, lives in a mixed-faith city in northern Nigeria with his single mother. When he is not badgering his mother to reveal the identity of his father or debating mathematical theorems and “Anifuturism”—an ideology that fuses animism and Afrofuturism—he lusts over white girls. As Andy grows close with Eileen, the white niece of a missionary, he is both smitten and stung. When she effusively compliments his poetry, he wonders “why’s she so surprised to find such poetry here—does she think we ain’t that good?” Eventually, he becomes disillusioned with Africa, but not before alienating a longtime friend. As the political situation worsens, Andy falls victim to what he calls the continent’s “Curse”: he’s arrested on trumped-up terrorism charges and only released because his uncle is connected, leaving him feeling rootless and wanting to leave the continent. Buoro is a creative if not quite mature storyteller; his ideas on Afrofuturism are inspired, but there are too many pages devoted to gratuitous sex scenes with Andy and Eileen. Nonetheless, this bold, spirited tale deserves attention.

    • Library Journal

      April 21, 2023

      DEBUT Andrew Aziza, a 15-year-old Nigerian math prodigy, prize-winning poet, altar boy who doubts God's existence, and sexually naive virgin obsessed with blondes, narrates this irreverent coming-of-age story from Nigerian-born, UK-based debut author Buoro. Like any teen, Andy switches from exaggerated eye roll to thoughtful introspection on a dime. His jaunty banter with friends Slim, Morocca, and Fatima belies the insecurity of a boy whose father--and hence his origin--is unknown, an omission for which he resents his mother. Disillusionment runs deep in Nigeria's youth, with poverty and unemployment making the dangerous crossing to Europe look enticing. So when British priest Father McMahan, who for 30 years has created a robust church presence in this majority Muslim region, invites his teenage niece Eileen to visit, is it any wonder that Andy tumbles for this blonde goddess who represents all that he aspires to? Eileen's reception is well underway when word arrives that a misunderstanding in the Muslim community has spawned unrest in town. Violence escalates, the church burns, a mob attacks parishioners, and Andy's youthful dreaminess hits a wall of stark reality. VERDICT Buoro, a Booker Foundation Scholarship recipient, deftly blends low-brow humor with sophisticated religious and literary references, elevating this highly anticipated novel to a poignant lament for a country and its children.--Sally Bissell

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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