Zimbabwean NoViolet Bulawayo who hails from New Lobengula in Bulawayo, has scooped this year’s Caine Prize for African Writing.
She works as a lecturer at Cornell University in New York and said one day she hopes to become a full time writer. Her short story called Hitting Budapest follows a group of six starving Zimbabwean children, one of whom is pregnant at age 10, as they go about fending for themselves.
The children from a shanty town decide to raid a well off neighbourhood for guavas. They encounter a rich woman and insult her for throwing away a piece of pizza, a food they discover for the first time in their lives. On their way back home they come across the body of someone who has committed suicide.
Asked if her story is related to the current situation in Zimbabwe, she said it was linked through the issue of poverty. “The real issue is that a lot of people are living below the poverty line and children, being society’s most vulnerable victims, are suffering the brunt of it,” she said. The story also draws heavily from her own experiences of growing up in Zimbabwe.
Bulawayo was chosen from 126 submissions by a jury consisting of this year’s Commonwealth Writers’ Prize winner Aminatta Forna and the Man Booker Prize shortlisted Libyan author Hisham Matar, among others.
Handing over the prize, Matar explained why Bulawayo was chosen over four other shortlisted writers:
“The language of Hitting Budapest crackles,” he said. “Here we encounter Darling, Bastard, Chipo, Godknows, Stina and Sbho, a gang reminiscent of ‘Clockwork Orange.’ But these are children, poor and violated and hungry. This is a story with moral power and weight (yet) has the artistry to refrain from moral commentary.”
As Caine Prize winner NoViolet receives £10,000 cash and will be given the opportunity to take up a month’s residence at Georgetown University, Washington DC, as a writer-in-residence. The award will cover all travel and living expenses.
The Caine Prize has become a near-infallible early warning system for new African talent. Often, just being shortlisted is enough to catapult African authors to international renown, as has been evidenced by Nigerian author Chimamanda Adichie.
Previous winners such as Leila Aboulela, Helon Habila and Kenyan Binyavanga Wainaina have gone on to publish critically acclaimed works, as well as further the cause of writing in their respective countries.
Read Hitting Budapest
Buy the book: ‘To See the Mountain and other stories’ features all five stories shortlisted in 2011.
Out of Shadows is Jason Wallace’s first novel and is set in Zimbabwe in the 1980s, just after the war for independence.
About the Author
A new book by Henry Olonga has just been released, called Blood Sweat & Treason tells the story of his childhood in Zimbabwe, of his gradual realisation that he was living in a dictatorship, of his battle to reach the very top as a black cricketer and how he sacrificed his position to do something he hoped would make a difference.
Black Armband Protest
Currently available in Hardcover it is available online through Amazon, in the UK and US
Bulu is the true story of a courageous Jack Russell terrier-mix dog. Born on a crocodile farm in Zambia’s untamed South Luangwa Valley, he seemed different from his littermates. Too quiet. Unresponsive. Nobody wanted him. He was finally adopted by two retired police officers from England-Anna and Steve Tolan who had left their home in Great Britain to follow a dream. To build and run a wildlife education centre for the children of Zambia’s South Luangwa Valley, to teach them about the value of wildlife and how to conserve this last great African wilderness.
But Bulu’s protective nature led him into terrifying situations in the wild. It’s a miracle he survived! But survive he did, disarming people with his wacky ways and nurturing once-unwanted creatures like himself until they too could be set free.
Dick Houston
Amazon, in the UK and US have hardcover copies of the book and in the US, you can also buy a digital Kindle Book version:
“Scott is facing bankruptcy amid the turmoil that grips the financial markets of 2008. He is saved when money is transferred to his account from an unexpected source. We flash back to war-torn 1970′s Rhodesia where Scott is growing up as a privileged white boy alongside his best friend, Simba, a black boy, on his parents’ farm…”
Mason Cranswick
Amazon, in the UK and US have paperback copies of the book and in the US, you can also buy a digital Kindle Book version: 