The Christian Science Monitor

Rewriting the historical epic: African women writers go big

For more than two decades, wherever the Zimbabwean writer Petina Gappah went, the colonial explorer David Livingstone seemed to follow.

She found Livingstone – his papers, his diaries, his biographies – in Melbourne and Cape Town and London. She discovered Livingstonia wedged into boxes at Zimbabwean flea markets and tucked onto high shelves in Irish bookshops. Livingstone followed her to estate sales and book fairs and antique shops splayed across nearly every continent.

She couldn’t shake her fascination with his story – a “heroic failure,” she called him, searching in vain for the source of the

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Christian Science Monitor

The Christian Science Monitor2 min readAmerican Government
Why 'Two Montana Guys' Are Duking It Out In The Senate
About 45 minutes into our Monitor Breakfast on May 2 with Sen. Steve Daines, I finally asked him the question: “So how's your relationship with Jon Tester these days, given that you're trying to get him fired?” Senators Daines and Tester of Montana a
The Christian Science Monitor3 min read
As Campus Protests Flare, Congress Seeks Reckoning On Antisemitism
As student protests roil Columbia University and other campuses across the United States, Congress is stepping in to the fray. The House on Wednesday overwhelmingly passed an antisemitism bill 320-91 that would pressure universities to rein in rhetor
The Christian Science Monitor3 min read
Housing Projects: Paris Curates Its Streets, And Navajo Homes Get Addresses
Rural communities often rely on step-by-step, descriptive addresses to access services. But this can lead to logistical snafus, such as emergency vehicles’ delayed response. Using Google’s open-source Plus Codes, the Rural Utah Project has helped reg

Related Books & Audiobooks