Heinemann African Writers Series

Last updated

Heinemann African Writers Series
African Writers Series colophon.svg
African Writers Series colophon, which was intended to look like an Africanised version of Heinemann's windmill logo, as well as incorporating the letters A.W.
Parent company Heinemann
Founded1962;61 years ago (1962)
Country of origin United Kingdom
Key peopleAlan Hill
Chinua Achebe
Van Milne
Keith Sambrook
Aigboje Higo
Henry Chakava
James Currey

The African Writers Series (AWS) is a collection of books written by African novelists, poets and politicians. Published by Heinemann, 359 books appeared in the series between 1962 and 2003. [1]

Contents

The series has provided an international audience for many African writers, including Chinua Achebe, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Steve Biko, Ama Ata Aidoo, Nadine Gordimer, Buchi Emecheta, and Okot p'Bitek.

History

1958William Heinemann publishes Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart . 2,000 hardcover copies were printed and sold at a price of 15 shillings. The book receives widespread acclaim. [2] [3] [4]

1959 – Alan Hill, head of Heinemann's educational department, visits West Africa. He finds that Achebe remains largely unknown in his home country of Nigeria due to the small print run and high price of his first novel. [4]

1960 – Heinemann Educational Books (HEB) is set up as a separate company and begins to publicise Achebe in Africa. They start to receive manuscripts from other African authors. Alan Hill recruits Evan McKay Milne, known as Van Milne, a West Africa specialist. He becomes HEB's Overseas Director. [5] [4] [6] [1]

1961 – Van Milne originates the idea of the African Writers Series. Hill explains that the plan was "to start a paperback series, confined to black African authors; the books were to be attractively designed with high quality production, and sold at a very cheap price—as low as 25p at the outset". [6] [7]

1962 – Alan Hill and Van Milne launch the African Writers Series with a paperback edition of Things Fall Apart, followed by Cyprian Ekwensi's Burning Grass, and then Kenneth Kaunda's autobiography Zambia Shall Be Free. Chinua Achebe is appointed Editorial Advisor with a salary of £150 a year. This is increased to £250 in 1967. [5] [4] [1]

1963 – Van Milne leaves Heinemann and is replaced by Keith Sambrook. [5] [8]

1964 – Sambrook is concerned that the early selections for the series will not reach the educational market, particularly after the inclusion of Zambia Shall Be Free. He begins collaborating with African and non-African academics to produce publications that would more clearly meet this aim. The first result is A Book of African Verse edited by Clive Wake and John Reed, teachers at the University College of Rhodesia. [8]

1965 – Aigboje Higo is appointed as manager of HEB Nigeria. [5]

1967 – James Currey is appointed to work with Keith Sambrook to develop the series. [5]

1970 – Henry Chakava is appointed as editor of HEB East Africa and becomes managing director in 1975. [5]

1972 – Chinua Achebe leaves his position following the publication of his short story collection Girls At War as the hundredth book in the series. Sambrook, Currey, Higo and Chakava take over editorial duties collectively with the support of Akin Thomas, editorial director of HEB Nigeria. [5] [9]

1983 – Heinemann Group is taken over for the first time and goes through a series of takeovers in the coming years. [5]

1984 – James Currey steps down after new management reduces new publications to only one or two a year. Of the 270 titles in the series, 15 are put out of print. [5]

1986 – the series is relaunched by Vicky Unwin, who targets the western academic market due to the drop in spending in the African educational market. [10]

1988 – Keith Sambrook steps down. [5]

1992 – Caroline Avens begins to oversee the series, reducing the backlist and starting to publish more new authors. [11]

1993Adewale Maja-Pearce appointed general editor. [12]

1994Abdulrazak Gurnah appointed as editorial advisor. [12]

2002 – Only 70 of the more than 300 titles in the series remain in print. [5]

2003 – Heinemann announces no new titles will be added to the series. By 2008, only 64 titles remain in print. [5]

Content

The African Writers Series reissued paperback editions of works previously only available as more expensive hardbacks, translated books that had been published in other languages, and published the first works of unknown writers.

The decision to reissue paperback editions of English-language hardbacks followed the early success of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart and continued for many years. However, it became clear very quickly that there were not enough works in English, so translations began to be made from French of works by Ferdinand Oyono, Mongo Beti and others. This was followed by translations from Portuguese, Zulu, Swahili, Acholi, Sesotho, Afrikaans, Luganda, and Arabic. [13] [14]

At the same time, they published new authors. This started with Ngũgĩ, who helped to expand the reach of the series into East Africa. [15]

This approach provided opportunities for authors from across most of Africa. More than 80 titles published in the series were by Nigerian writers, who were followed by South Africans, Kenyans, Ghanaians, and Zimbabweans. In the first two decades, nearly all were men and it was only in the 1990s that books by women began to appear regularly. Some exceptions to this are early books by Flora Nwapa and Buchi Emecheta. [1]

Novels would make up the bulk of the series, but it extended to poetry, anthologies, short stories, autobiographies, drama, non fiction, and oral traditions. [1]

Design

Six AWS covers, showing the shift in design from 1962 to 1993 Six AWS covers, showing the shift in the design.png
Six AWS covers, showing the shift in design from 1962 to 1993

Between 1962 and 1986 all the books in the African Writers Series were colour-coded: orange for fiction, blue for non-fiction, and green for poetry and drama. While this highlighted the different genres, all books in the series during this period were numbered to give a clear indication that they belonged to a collection of works by African writers. [16]

Some evolution in cover design did take place during these years. Between 1962 and 1965 a heavy black band was featured at the top of the covers, with a black-and-white illustration below. The black was then replaced by a solid orange block. Later a colophon was added that was intended to look like an Africanised version of Heinemann's windmill logo. In 1971 George Hallett was employed to produce cover photography, which began to replace the use of illustrations. [17]

In 1986, the design was changed to appeal more in western markets. Orange was replaced by a white background with a boxed abstract image. In 1993, it was changed again to incorporate full-colour images. [16]

Reception

The African Writers Series includes five winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature: Wole Soyinka (1986), Naguib Mahfouz (1988), Nadine Gordimer (1991), Doris Lessing (2007), and Abdulrazak Gurnah (2021). Books in the series have also won the Commonwealth Prize, the NOMA Award for African Writing, the Caine Prize for African Writing, and Guardian Fiction Prize. In 2002, at a celebration of Africa's 100 Best Books of the Twentieth Century, Heinemann was given a prize, as 12 of the titles chosen were from the series. [18]

Bibliography

A definitive bibliography of the series was prepared by Nourdin Bejjit as part of his PhD research at the Open University and included in James Currey's book-length treatment of the series, with some additional information from Heinemann. [19]

NumberAuthorYearTitle
1 Achebe, Chinua 1962 Things Fall Apart
2 Ekwensi, Cyprian 1962 Burning Grass: a story of the Fulani of Northern Nigeria. Illustrated by A. Folarin; cover drawing by Dennis Duerden.
3Achebe, Chinua1963 No Longer at Ease . Illustrated by Bruce Onobrakpeya.
4 Kaunda, Kenneth D. 1962 Zambia Shall Be Free: an autobiography
5Ekwensi, Cyprian1963 People of the City . Revised edition. (Originally published London: Dakers, 1954.)
6 Abrahams, Peter 1963 Mine Boy . Illustrated by Ruth Yudelowitz. (London: Crisp, 1946; London: Faber, 1954; New York: Knopf, 1955.)
7 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (as Ngugi, James)1964 Weep Not, Child
8 Reed, John, Wake, Clive, eds1964A Book of African Verse. Later edition published (1984) as New Book of African Verse.
9 Rive, Richard, ed.1964Modern African Prose. An anthology compiled and edited by Richard Rive. Illustrated by Albert Adams. Contributions by Peter Abrahams, Chinua Achebe, Es'kia Mphahlele, Abioseh Nicol, Richard Rive, Alfred Hutchinson, Efua Sutherland, Jonathan Kariara, Peter Clarke, Luis Bernardo Honwana, Jack Cope, Cyprian Ekwensi, Amos Tutuola, Camara Laye, James Matthews, Alf Wannenburgh, William Conton, Onuora Nzekwu, and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o.
10 Equiano, Olaudah 1967 Equiano's Travels: His Autobiography; The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African . Abridged and edited by Paul Edwards
11 Aluko, T. M. 1965 One Man, One Matchet
12 Conton, William 1964 The African . (Previously published London: Heinemann, 1960. Boston: Little Brown, 1960.)
13 Beti, Mongo 1964 Mission to Kala: a novel. Translated by Peter Green from the French novel Mission terminée (1957). US edition (New York, Macmillan) published as Mission Accomplished.
14 Rive, Richard, ed.1963Quartet: New voices from South Africa. Short stories by Alex La Guma, James Matthews, Richard Rive and Alf Wannenburgh.
15 Cook, David 1965Origin East Africa: a Makerere anthology devised and edited by David Cook. Prose and verse.
16Achebe, Chinua1965 Arrow of God
17 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (as Ngugi, James)1965 The River Between
18 Obotunde Ijimere 1966The Imprisonment of Obatala, and other plays.
19Ekwensi, Cyprian1966 Lokotown and Other Stories .
20 Gatheru, Mugo 1966Child of Two Worlds.
21 Munonye, John 1966 The Only Son .
22 Peters, Lenrie 1966 The Second Round .
23 Beier, Ulli, ed.1966The Origin of Life and Death: African creation myths.
24 Kachingwe, Aubrey 1966No Easy Task.
25 Amadi, Elechi 1966 The Concubine . Heinemann: London.
26 Nwapa, Flora 1966 Efuru .
27 Selormey, Francis 1967 The Narrow Path .
28Cook, David, Lee, Miles, eds1968Short East African Plays in English: Ten plays in English.
29 Oyono, Ferdinand 1966 Houseboy . Translated by John Reed from the French Une vie de boy
30Aluko, T. M.1967 One Man, One Wife .
31Achebe, Chinua1966 A Man of the People . (Originally published: Nigerian Printing and Publishing, 1959.)
32Aluko, T. M.1967 Kinsman and Foreman
33 Samkange, Stanlake 1967On Trial for my Country
34 Pieterse, Cosmo, ed.1968Ten One-Act Plays. Includes "Encounter" by Kuldip Sondhi; "Yon Kon" by Pat Maddy; "The Game" by Femi Euba; "Blind Cyclos" by Ime Ikeddeh; "With Strings' by Kuldip Sondhi; "The Deviant" by Ganesh Bagchi; "Fusane's Trial" by Alfred Hutchinson; "The Opportunity" by Arthur Maimane; "Maama" by Kwesi Kay; and "The Occupation" by Athol Fugard
35La Guma, Alex1967A Walk in the Night and other stories.
36Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (as Ngugi, James)1967 A Grain of Wheat .
37Peters, Lenrie1967Satellites
38 Oginga Odinga 1967Not Yet Uhuru: the autobiography of Oginga Odinga. With a foreword by Kwame Nkrumah.
39Oyono, Ferdinand1969 The Old Man and the Medal . Translated by John Reed from the French Le vieux nègre et la médaille.
40 Konadu, Asare 1967A Woman in Her Prime
41 Djoleto, Amu 1968The Strange Man.
42 Awoonor, Kofi and Adali-Mortty, G. 1970Messages: Poems from Ghana.
43 Armah, Ayi Kwei 1969 The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born . (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1968.)
44Amadi, Elechi1969The Great Ponds.
45Munonye, John1969 Obi .
46 Brutus, Dennis 1968Letters to Martha: and other poems from a South African prison.
47 Salih, Tayeb 1969 The Wedding of Zein, and other stories . London; printed in Malta: HEB, 1969. Translated by Denys Johnson-Davies from the Arabic, and illustrated by Ibrahim Salahi.
48 Gbadamosi, Bakare; Beier, Ulli1968Not Even God Is Ripe Enough. Translated from the Yoruba
49 Nkrumah, Kwame 1968Neo-colonialism: the last stage of imperialism. (Originally published London: Nelson, 1965)
50 Clark, J. P. 1968 America: Their America . London: HEB in association with Andre Deutsch. (Originally published London: Deutsch, 1964.)
51Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o (as Ngugi, James)1968 The Black Hermit .
52 Sellassie, B. M. Sahle 1969The Afersata: an Ethiopian novel. London: HEB.
53 Palangyo, Peter K. 1968Dying in the Sun.136pp
54 Serumaga, Robert 1970Return to the Shadows.
55Konadu, Asare1969Ordained by the Oracle. 160 pp. Originally published as Come Back Dora, Accra: Anowuo Educational Publ.
56Nwapa, Flora1970Idu.
57 Dipoko, Mbella Sonne 1969Because of Women.
58Beier, Ulli, ed.1969Political Spider: an anthology of stories from "Black Orpheus".
59 Asare, Bediako 1971 Rebel .
60 Honwana, Luís Bernardo 1969 We Killed Mangy Dog and Other Stories . Translated from the Portuguese by Dorothy Guedes.
61 Umeasiegbu, Rems Nna 1969The Way We Lived: Ibo customs and stories.
62 Okigbo, Christopher 1971Labyrinths. With Path of Thunder.
63 Ousmane, Sembene 1970 God's Bits of Wood . Translated by Francis Price.
64Pieterse, Cosmo, ed.19717 South African Poets: poems of exile. Collected and selected by Cosmo Pieterse.
66Salih, Tayeb1969 Season of Migration to the North . Translated by Denys Johnson-Davies from the Arabic Mawsim al-hijrah ilā al-shamāl.
67 Nwankwo, Nkem 1970Danda. (Originally published London: Deutsch, 1964)
68 Okara, Gabriel 1970 The Voice . Introduction by Arthur Ravenscroft. (Originally published London: Deutsch, 1964)
69 Liyong, Taban lo 1969Fixions, and other stories.
70Aluko, T. M.1970Chief, The Honourable Minister.
71 Senghor, Léopold Sédar 1969Nocturnes. Translated by John Reed and Clive Wake from the French.
72 U'tamsi, Felix 1970Selected Poems. Translated by Gerald Moore from the French.
73 Ortzen, Len, ed.1970North African Writing. Selected, translated, and with an introduction by Len Ortzen.
74Liyong, Taban lo, ed.1970Eating Chiefs: Lwo culture from Lolwe to Malkal. Selected, interpreted and transmuted by Taban lo Liyong.
75 Knappert, Jan 1970Myths and Legends of the Swahili.
76 Soyinka, Wole 1970 The Interpreters . With introduction and notes by Eldred Jones. London: Heinemann. (Originally published London: Deutsch, 1965.)
77Beti, Mongo1970King Lazarus: a novel. Translated from the French Le roi miraculé (French version originally published Editions Buchet, 1958.)
78Pieterse, Cosmo1972Short African plays. Including: "Ancestral Power" by Kofi Awoonor; "Magic Pool" by Kuldip Sondhi; "God's Deputy" by Sanya Dosunmu; "Resurrection" by Richard Rive; "Life Everlasting" by Pat Amadu Maddy; "Lament" by Kofi Awoonor; "Ballad of the Cells" by Cosmo Pieterse; "Overseas" by Mbella Sonne Dipoko; "This Time Tomorrow" by Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o; "Episodes of an Easter Rising" by David Lytton
79 Chraibi, Driss 1972Heirs to the Past. Translated by Len Ortzen from the French.(Succession ouverte originally published Paris: Denoël, 1962.)
80 Farah, Nuruddin 1970 From a Crooked Rib .
81 Mboya, Tom 1970The Challenge of Nationhood: a collection of speeches and writings. Foreword by H. E. Mzee Jomo Kenyatta, and postscript by Pamela Mboya.
82 Dipoko, Mbella Sonne 1970A Few Nights and Days. (Originally published, Harlow: Longmans, 1966.)
83 Knappert, Jan 1971Myths and Legends of the Congo. Nairobi: HEB.
84Ekwensi, Cyprian1971Beautiful Feathers. (Originally published London: Hutchinson, 1963)
85 Onuora Nzekwu 1971 Wand of Noble Wood .
86 Bebey, Francis 1971Agatha Moudio's Son. Translated by Joyce A. Hutchinson from the French Le fils d'Agatha Moudio.
87 Dadié, Bernard B. 1971Climbié. Translated by Karen C. Chapman from the French.
88Beti, Mongo1971The Poor Christ of Bomba. Translated by Gerald Moore from the French Le pauvre Christ de Bombay. (Original French edition published 1956.)
89 Maddy, Pat Amadu 1971Obasai and other plays.
90Liyong, Taban lo1971Frantz Fanon's Uneven Ribs: poems more and more.
91Nzekwu, Onuora1972Blade Among the Boys. (Originally published London: Hutchinson, 1962.)
92Ousmane, Sembène1972 The Money-Order; with, White Genesis . Translated by Clive Wake. London: Heinemann. (Translation of Vehi ciosane; ou, Blanche-genèse; suivi du Mandat, Paris: Présence Africaine, 1965.)
93 Knappert, Jan, ed.1972A Choice of Flowers. Chaguo la Maua: an anthology of Swahili love poetry. Edited and translated from Swahili by Jan Knappert.
94Munonye, John1971Oil Man of Obange.
95 Ibrahim, Sonallah 1971The Smell Of It, and other stories. Translated from the Arabic by Denys Johnson-Davies.
96Cook, David, Rubadiri, David, eds1971Poems from East Africa.
97 Mazrui, Ali A. 1971The Trial of Christopher Okigbo.
98 Mulaisho, Dominic 1971The Tongue of the Dumb.
99 Ouologuem, Yambo 1971Bound to Violence. Translated by Ralph Manheim from the French Devoi de violence. (Originally published London: Secker & Warburg, 1971.)
100Achebe, Chinua1972Girls At War and Other Stories.
101 Head, Bessie 1972Maru.
102 Omotoso, Kole 1971The Edifice.
103Peters, Lenrie1971Katchikali. Poems.
104 Themba, Can 1972The Will to Die. Selected by Donald Stuart and Roy Holland.
105 Lubega, Bonnie 1971The Outcasts.
106Reed, John, Wake, Clive, eds1972French African verse. With English translations by John Reed & Clive Wake.
107 Dipoko, Mbella Sonne 1972Black and White in Love: poems.
108 Awoonor, Kofi 1972 This Earth, My Brother . (Originally published Garden City: Doubleday, 1971.)
109 Obiechina, Emmanuel N. 1972Onitsha Market Literature.
110La Guma, Alex1972 In the Fog of the Seasons' End .
111 Angira, Jared 1972Silent Voices: poems.
112 Vambe, Lawrence 1972An Ill-Fated People: Zimbabwe before and after Rhodes. (Originally published with a foreword by Doris Lessing, London: Heinemann, 1972.)
113 Mezu, S. Okechukwu 1971 Behind the Rising Sun .
114Pieterse, Cosmo1972Five African Plays.
115Brutus, Dennis1973A Simple Lust: selected poems including Sirens Knuckles Boots; Letters to Martha; Poems from Algiers; Thoughts Abroad.
116Liyong, Taban lo1972Another Nigger Dead: poems.
117 Hakim, Tawfiq al- 1973Fate of a Cockroach: four plays of freedom. Selected and translated from the Arabic by Denys Johnson-Davies.
118 Amadu, Malum 1972Amadu's Bundle: Fulani tales of love and djinns. Collected by Malum Amadu; edited by Gulla Kell and translated into English by Ronald Moody.
119 Kane, Hamidou 1972 Ambiguous Adventure . Translated from the French by Katherine Woods. (This translation originally published New York: Walker, 1963. Translation of L'Aventure ambiguë. Paris: Julliard, 1962.)
120Achebe, Chinua1970Beware, Soul Brother. Revised and enlarged edition. London: HEB.
121Munonye, John1973A Wreath for Maidens. [S.I.]: Heinemann
122 Omotoso, Kole 1972The Combat.
123 Mandela, Nelson 1973No Easy Walk to Freedom.
124 Dikobe, Modikwe 1973The Marabi Dance.
125 Worku, Daniachew 1973The Thirteenth Sun.
126 Cheney-Coker, Syl 1973 Concerto for an Exile: poems.
127 Henderson, Gwyneth, Pieterse, Cosmo, eds1973Nine African Plays for Radio.
128 Zwelonke, D. M. 1973Robben Island.
129 Egudu, Romanus, Nwoga, Donatus, eds1973Igbo Traditional Verse. Compiled and translated by Romanus Egudu and Donatus Nwoga. (Originally published 1971 as Poetic Heritage.)
130Aluko, T. M.1973His Worshipful Majesty.
131 Lessing, Doris 1973 The Grass is Singing
132 Bown, Lalage 1973Two Centuries of African English: a survey and anthology of non-fictional English prose by African writers since 1769.
133 Mukasa, Ham 1975Sir Apolo Kagwa Discovers Britain. Edited by Taban lo Liyong. (First published in 1904 as Uganda's Katikiro in England.)
134Henderson, Gwyneth, ed.1973African Theatre: eight prize-winning plays for radio. Includes "Make Like Slaves" by Richard Rive; "Station Street" by A. K. Mustapha; "Sweet Scum of Freedom" by J. Singh; "Double Attack" by C. C. Umeh; "Scholarship Woman" by D. Clems; "The Transistor Radio" by K. Tsaro-Wiwa; "Family Spear" by E. N. Zirimu; and "Sign of the Rainbow" by W. Ogunyemi.
135 Maran, René 1973Batouala. Translated by Barbara Beck and Alexandre Mboukou; introduction by Donald E. Herdeck.
136 Sekyi, Kobina 1974The Blinkards.
137 Maddy, Yulisa Amadu 1973No Past, No Present, No Future.
138 Owusu, Martin 1973The Sudden Return, and other plays.
139 Ruheni, Mwangi 1973 The Future Leaders .
140Amadi, Elechi1973Sunset in Biafra: a civil war diary.
141 Nortje, Arthur 1973Dead Roots. Poems.
142Sembène, Ousmane1974Tribal Scars and other stories. Translated from the French by Len Ortzen.
143 Mwangi, Meja 1973Kill Me Quick.
144 Fall, Malick 1973The Wound. Translated by Clive Wake from the French La plaie.
145Mwangi, Meja1974Carcase for Hounds.
146Ekwensi, Cyprian1975 Jagua Nana . (Originally published, London: Hutchinson, 1961.)
147 p'Bitek, Okot 1974The Horn of My Love.
148 Aniebo, I. N. C. 1974The Anonymity of Sacrifice.
149 Head, Bessie 1974A Question of Power. (Originally published London: Davis-Poynter, 1974.)
150Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o1975Secret Lives, and other stories.
151 Mahfouz, Naguib 1975Midaq Alley. Translated from the Arabic by Trevor Le Gassick.
152La Guma, Alex1974 The Stone-Country . (Originally published 1967.)
153Munonye, John1975A Dancer of Fortune. (London: William Heinemann, 1974.)
154Armah, Ayi Kwei1974Fragments.
155Armah, Ayi Kwei1974Why Are We So Blest?: a novel. London: Heinemann.
156Ruheni, Mwangi1975The Minister's Daughter.
157 Kayper-Mensah, A. W. 1975The Drummer in Our Time.
158 Kahiga, Samuel 1974The Girl From Abroad.
159 Mvungi, Martha 1975Three Solid Stones.
160 Mwase, George Simeon 1975Strike a Blow and Die: the classic story of the Chilembwe Rising. Edited and introduced by Robert I. Rotberg.
161Djoleto, Amu1975Money Galore.
162 Kayira, Legson 1974The Detainee. London: Heinemann.
163Sellassie, B. M. Sahle1974Warrior King.
164 Royston, Robert 1974Black Poets in South Africa.
165 Etherton, Michael, ed.1975African Plays for Playing. Plays by Nuwa Sentongo, Jacob Hevi & Segun Ajibade. Selected and edited by Michael Etherton. London: Heinemann.
166 De Graft, Joe 1975Beneath the Jazz and Brass.
167 Rabearivelo, Jean-Joseph 1975Translations from the Night: selected poems of Jean-Joseph Rabearivelo. Edited with English translations by Clive Wake and John Reed.
168 Echewa, T. Obinkaram 1976The Land's Lord.
169Samkange, Stanlake1975The Mourned One.
170 Mungoshi, Charles 1975Waiting for the Rain.
171Soyinka, Wole, ed.1975Poems of Black Africa. Edited and introduced by Wole Soyinka. London: Heinemann.
172Ekwensi, Cyprian1975Restless City and Christmas Gold. London: Heinemann.
173 Nwankwo, Nkem 1975My Mercedes is Bigger Than Yours.
174 Diop, David Mandessi 1975Hammer Blows. Translated from the French and edited by Simon Mpondo and Frank Jones. London: Heinemann.
175Ousmane, Sembène1976 Xala . Translated from the French by Clive Wake. As Xala: roman, Paris: Présence Africaine, 1973.
176Mwangi, Meja1976Going Down River Road.
177 Gordimer, Nadine 1976Some Monday for Sure.
178 Peteni, R. L. 1976 Hill of Fools .
179Etherton, Michael (ed.)1976African Plays for Playing 2. Includes Monkey on the tree by Uwa Udensi, Black mamba two by Godfrey Kabwe Kasoma and The tradedy of Mr. No-balance by Victor Eleame Musinga.
180Senghor, Léopold Sédar1976Prose and Poetry. Selected and translated from French by John Reed and Clive Wake.
181Beti, Mongo1978Perpetua and the Habit of Unhappiness. Translated by Clive Wake and John Reed from the French Perpétue et l'habitude du malheur (originally published Paris: Editions Buchet-Chastel, 1974).
182 Head, Bessie 1977The Collector of Treasures.
183 Okara, Gabriel 1978The Fisherman's Invocation.
184Farah, Nuruddin1976 A Naked Needle .
185Ekwensi, Cyprian1976Survive the Peace.
186 Boateng, Yaw M. 1977The Return.
187 Rugyendo, Mukotani 1977Barbed Wire and Other Plays.
188Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o1977Petals of Blood.
189 Iroh, Eddie 1976Forty-eight Guns for the General
190Samkange, Stanlake1978Year of the Uprising
191Thiong'o, Ngũgĩ wa & Mugo, Micere Githae 1976The trial of Dedan Kimathi
192 Jahadmy, Ali A. (ed.)1977Anthology of Swahili poetry. Parallel Swahili text and English translation. Selected and translated by Ali A. Jahadmy.
193p'Bitek, Okot1978Hare and Hornbill. Compiled and translated from the Acholi by Okot p'Bitek. London: Heinemann.
194Armah, Ayi Kwei1979The Healers: an historical novel.
195Munonye, John1978Bridge to a Wedding. London: Heinemann.
196Johnson-Davies, Denys (ed.)1978Egyptian short stories. Includes "House of flesh" by Yusuf Idris, "Grandad Hasan" by Yahya Taher Abdullah, "Within the walls" by Edward El-Kharrat, "The performer" by Ibrahim Aslan, "The whistle" by Abdul Hakim Kassem, "Suddenly it rained" by Baha Taher, "The man who saw the sole of his left foot in a cracked mirror" by Lutfi Al-Khouli, "A conversation from the third floor" by Mohamed El-Bisatie, "Yusuf Murad Morcos" by Nabil Gorgy, "The conjurer made off with the dish" by Naguib Mahfouz, "The accusation" by Suleiman Fayyad, "A place under the dome" by Abdul Rahman Fahmy, "The country boy" by Yusuf Sibai, "The snake" by Sonallah Ibrahim, "The crush of life" by Yusuf Sharouni, "A story from prison" by Yahya Hakki & "The child and the king" by Gamil Atia Ibrahim.
197Mahfouz, Naguib1978Miramar. Edited and revised by Maged el Kommos and John Rodenbeck; introduced by John Fowles.
198 Cabral, Amilcar 1979Unity and Struggle: speeches and writings. Texts selected by the PAIGC; translated from Portuguese by Michael Wolfers.
199 Sassine, Williams 1980Wirriyamu. Translated from the French by John Reed and Clive Wake.
200Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o1982 Devil on the Cross .
201 Plaatje, Sol T. 1978 Mhudi: an epic of South African native life a hundred years ago. (New York: Negro Univ. Press, 1970; Johannesburg: Quagga Press, Ad. Donker, 1975; London: Rex Collings, 1976; Washington, DC: Three Continents Press, 1978).
202 Vieira, José Luandino 1978The Real Life of Domingos Xavier. Translated from the Portuguese by Michael Wolfers.
203 Njau, Rebeka 1978Ripples in the Pool. (Nairobi: Transafrica, 1975.)
204 Mulaisho, Dominic 1979The Smoke that Thunders
205Bebey, Francis1978The Ashanti Doll. Translated from the French by Joyce A. Hutchinson.
206 Aniebo, I. N. C. 1978The Journey Within.
207 Marechera, Dambudzo 1978The House of Hunger.
208Brutus, Dennis1978Stubborn Hope: new poems and selections. London: Heinemann.
209Idris, Yusuf1978The Cheapest Nights, and other stories. Translated from the Arabic by Wadida Wassef.
210Amadi, Elechi1978The Slave.
211 Kunene, Mazisi 1979Emperor Shaka the great: a Zulu epic. Translated from the Zulu by the author.
212 La Guma, Alex 1979 Time of the Butcherbird . (Heinemann, 1979)
213Iroh, Eddie1979Toads of War.
214Beti, Mongo1980Remember Ruben. Translated from the French by Gerald Moore. (Originally published Ibadan: New Horn, 1980.)
215 Wolfers, Michael (ed.)1979Poems from Angola. Selected, translated and introduced by Michael Wolfers.
216 Yirenkyi, Asiedu 1980Kivuli and other plays.
217 Biko, Steve 1979I Write What I Like: a selection of his writings. Edited by Aelred Stubbs.
218Armah, Ayi Kwei1979 Two Thousand Seasons . London: Heinemann.
219Kenyatta, Jomo1979Facing Mount Kenya: the traditional life of the Gikuyu. With an introduction by B. Malinowski. (Originally published London: Secker and Warburg, 1938.)
220Head, Bessie1981Serowe: Village of the Rain Wind.
221 Cheney-Coker, Syl 1980The Graveyard Also Has Teeth, with Concerto for an Exile: poems. London: Heinemann.
222 Vieira, José Luandino 1980 Luuanda . Translated from the Portuguese by Tamara L. Bender. London: Heinemann.
223 Ghanem, Fathy 1980The Man who Lost his Shadow: a novel in four books. Translated from the Arabic by Desmond Stewart.
224Kente, Gibson (ed.)1981South African people's plays. Includes uNosilimela by Credo V. Mutwa, Shanti by Mthuli Shezi, Too Late by Gibson Kente & Survival by the Workshop '71 Theatre Company.
225Mahfouz, Naguib1981Children of Gebelawi.
226Farah, Nuruddin1980Sweet and Sour Milk. (Originally published London: Allison & Busby, 1979.)
227Emecheta, Buchi1979The Joys of Motherhood. (Originally published London: Allison and Busby, 1979.)
228 Hussein, Taha 1981An Egyptian Childhood: the autobiography of Taha Hussein. Translated by E. H. Paxton.
229 Mofolo, Thomas 1981Chaka: an historical romance. New translation by Daniel P. Kunene. Originally translated from the Sesuto by F. H. Dutton, London & New York: OUP, 1967.
230 Feinberg, Barry (ed.)1980Poets to the People: South African Freedom Poems.
231 Jumbam, Kenjo 1980White Man of God.
232Johnson-Davies, Denys (ed.)1981Egyptian One-act Plays. Selected and translated from the Arabic by Denys Johnson-Davies. Includes The interrogation by Farid Kamil, The Trap by Alfred Farag, Marital bliss by Abdel-Moneim Selim, The wheat well by Ali Salem, and The donkey market by Tewfik al-Hakim.
233 Nyamfukudza, S. 1980The Non-Believer's Journey; 128 pp.
234Kunene, Mazisi1981Anthem of the Decades: a Zulu epic. Translated from Zulu by the author.
235Kunene, Mazisi1982The Ancestors and the Sacred Mountain: poems. Translated from Zulu.
236 Mapanje, Jack 1981 Of Chameleons and Gods ; 80 pp.
237Marechera, Dambudzo1980Black Sunlight.
238Peters, Lenrie1981Selected Poetry; 160 pp.
239 Kourouma, Ahmadou 1981The Suns of Independence. Translated from the French Les soleils des independances by Adrian Adams.
240Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o1981Detained: A Writers Prison Diary
241 Akare, Thomas 1981The Slums.
242Aluko, T. M.1982Wrong Ones in the Dock. London: Heinemann.
243 Mutloatse, Mothobi (ed.)1981Africa South: contemporary writings.
244 Ya-Otto, John with Ole Gjerstad and Michael Mercer 1982Battlefront Namibia: an autobiography
245NEVER ASSIGNED. [20]
246Thiong'o, Ngũgĩ wa1982I Will Marry When I Want.
247 Head, Bessie 1987 When Rain Clouds Gather
248 Bâ, Mariama 1981So long a letter. Translated from the French Si longue lettre by Modupé Bodé-Thomas.
249 Obasanjo, Olusegun 1981My Command: An Account of the Nigerian Civil War, 1967-1970.
250Ousmane, Sembène1981The Last of the Empire.
251 Lewin, Hugh 1981Bandiet: seven years in a South African prison.
252Farah, Nuruddin1982Sardines. (Originally published London: Allison & Busby, 1981.)
253 Aniebo, I. N. C. 1983Of Wives, Talismans, and the Dead: short stories. Arranged by Willfred F. Feuser. London; Exeter, N.H.: Heinemann.
254 Scanlon, Paul A. (ed.)1983Stories from central and southern Africa. Includes "Beggar my neighbour" by Dan Jacobson, "Kwashiorkor" by Can Themba, "About a girl who met a dimo" by Susheela Curtis, "Hajji Musa and the Hindu fire-walker" by Ahmed Essop, "The sisters" by Pauline Smith, "Tselane and the giant" by B. L. Leshoai, "Johannesburg, Johannesburg" by Nathaniel Nakasa, "Coming of the dry season" by Charles Mungoshi, "A soldier's embrace" by Nadine Gordimer, "Witchcraft" by Bessie Head, "The old woman" by Luis B. Honwana, "Dopper and Papist" by Herman C. Bosman, "The dishonest chief" by Ellis Singano and A. A. Roscoe, "The Soweto bride" by Mbulelo Mzamane, "A sunrise on the veld" by Doris Lessing, "The soldier without an ear" by Paul Zeleza, "Riva" by Richard Rive, "Sunlight in Trebizond Street" by Alan Paton, "The Christmas reunion" by Dambudzo Marechera, "The king of the waters" by A. C. Jordan, "Power" by Jack Cope, and "In corner B" by Es'kia (Zeke) Mphahlele.
255Iroh, Eddie1982The Siren in the Night.
256 Bruner, Charlotte H. (ed.)1983Unwinding Threads: writing by women in Africa.
257Calder, Angus, Jack Mapanje & Cosmo Peterse1983Summer Fires: new poetry of Africa.
258 Pheto, Molefe 1985And Night Fell: Memoirs of a Political Prisoner in South Africa. (Originally published London: Allison & Busby, 1983.)
259NEVER PUBLISHED"A volume called This is the Time was advertised as No. 259, but no such volume exists in any of the library catalogues we consulted. Research in the AWS archive at Reading University reveals that this was a projected anthology of Central and Southern African poetry, which was instead published as When My Brothers Come Home: Poems from Central and Southern Africa, edited by Frank M. Chipasula (Middleton, Conn.: Wesleyan University Press, 1985)." [20]
260NEVER PUBLISHED"Kofi Awoonor's Until the Morning After: Collected Poems 1963-1985 was to have been AWS number 260, but was apparently withdrawn by the author and instead published by Greenfield Review Press, New York, in 1987." [20]
261 Anyidoho, Kofi 1984A Harvest of our Dreams, with Elegy for the Revolution: poems.
262 Nagenda, John 1986The Seasons of Thomas Tebo.
263 Serote, Mongane 1983To Every Birth its Blood.
264De Graft, Joe1977Muntu.
265NEVER ASSIGNED. [20]
266p'Bitek, Okot1984Song of Lawino: &, Song of Ocol. Translated from the Acholi by Okot p'Bitek. Introduction by G. A. Heron; illustrations by Frank Horle. London: Heinemann.
267Idrīs, Yūsuf1984Rings of Burnished Brass.
268 Sepamia, Sepho 1981A Ride on the Whirlwind: a novel.
269 Pepetela 1984Mayombe.
270Achebe, Chinua, & C. L. Innes (eds)1985African short stories. Includes "The false prophet" by Sembene Ousmane, "Certain winds from the south" by Ama Ata Aidoo, "The apprentice" by Odun Balogun, "The will of Allah" by David Owoyele, "Civil peace" by Chinua Achebe, "The gentlemen of the jungle" by Jomo Kenyatta, "The green leaves" by Grace Ogot, "Bossy" by Abdulrazak Gurnah, "The spider's web" by Leonard Kibera, "Minutes of glory" by Ngugi wa Thiong'o, "An incident in the Ghobashi household" by Alifa Rifaat, "A handful of dates" by Tayeb Salih, "A conversation from the third floor" by Mohamed El-Bisatie, "Papa, snake & I" by B. L. Honwana, "The bridegroom" by Nadine Gordimer, "The betrayal" by Ahmed Essop, "Protista" by Dambudzo Marechera, "The coffee-cart girl" by Ezekiel Mphahlele, "Snapshots of a wedding" by Bessie Head, and "Reflections in a cell" by Mafika Gwala.
unnumbered Rifaat, Alifa 1985Distant View of a Minaret.
unnumberedAmadi, Elechi1986Estrangement.
unnumberedEchewa, T Obinkaram1986The Crippled Dancer
unnumberedSembene, Ousmane1987Black Docker
unnumberedRive, Richard1987Buckingham Palace, District 6
unnumberedLopes, Henri1987Tribaliks
unnumberedTambo, Oliver1987Oliver Tambo Speaks: Preparing for Power
unnumberedAchebe, Chinua1988Anthills of the Savanna
unnumbered Karodia, Farida 1988Coming Home and Other Stories, includes "Coming Home", "Something in the Air", "The Necklace", "Cardboard Mansions", "Ntombi", "iGoldi", "The Worlds According to Mrs Angela Ramsbotham", "Seeds of Discontent", "The Woman in Green"
unnumbered Wangusa, Timothy 1989Upon This Mountain
unnumberedMungoshi, Charles1989The Setting Sun and the Rolling World
unnumberedNgũgĩ wa Thiong'o1989Matigari
unnumberedVassanji, M. G.1989The Gunny Sack
unnumbered Laing, Kojo 1989Godhorse
unnumberedZimuya, Musaemura, Porter, Peter, Anyidoho, Kofi (eds)1989The Fate of Vultures, contributions by Tanure Ojaide, Afam Akeh, Gichora Mwangi, Ama Asantewa Ababio, Alex Agyei-Agyiri, Funso Aiyejina, Richard Afari Baafour, Biyi Bandele-Thomas, Philip Bateman, Charles Agboola Bodunde, John Murray Coates, James Putsch Commey, Jonathan Cumming, Achmat Dangor, Kofi Dondo, Patrick Ebewo, Godwin Ede, Ezenwa-Ohaeto, Bode-Law Faleyimu, Francis Faller, Femi Fatoba, Henry Garuba, Arthur K. de Graft-Rosenior, Martin Gwete, Chenjerai Hove, Esiaba Irobi, Frederick Bobor James, Beverley Jansen, Wumi Kaji, Ken N. Kamoche, Lawrence Karanja, Kolosa Kargbo, Boyo Lawal, Masango Lisongwe, Don Mattera, Zondi Mbano, Bennet Leboni, Buti Moleko, Lupenga Mphande, Edison Mpina, Fekessa Mwada, Crispin Namane, Valerie Nkomeshya, Pheroze Nowrojee, Silas Obadiah, Walter Odame, Tanure Ojaide, Felicity Atuki Okoth, Isi Omoifo, Thembile ka Pepeteka, Sobhna Keshval Poona, Kofi Sam, Gloria Sandak-Lewin, Erasmus Elikplim Forster Senaye, Sam Ukal, Michael Andrew Wakabi, Timothy Wangusa, Willie T. Zingani
unnumberedMahjoub, Jamal1989Navigation of a Rainmaker
unnumberedHove, Chenjerai1990Bones
unnumberedCheney-Coker, Syl1990The Last Harmattan of Alusine Dunbar
unnumberedChinodya, Shimmer1990Harvest of Thorns
unnumberedCouto, Mia1990Voices Made Night
unnumberedGool, Reshard1990Cape Town Coolie
unnumberedHead, Bessie1990A Woman Alone
unnumberedHead, Bessie1990Tales of Tenderness and Power
unnumberedMaja-Pearce, Adewale (ed)1990The Heinemann Book of African Poetry in English, contributions by Dennis Brutus, Marjorie Oludhe Macgoye, Christopher Okigbo, Lenrie Peters, Wole Soyinka, Kofi Awoonor, JP Clark Bekederemo, Syl Cheney-Coker, Arthur Nortje, Steve Chimombo, Jack Mapanje, Kojo Laing, Niyi Osundare, Tanure Ojaide, Musaemura Zimunya, Lupenga Mphande, Frank Chipasula, Molara Ogundipe-Leslie, Odia Ofeimun, Catherine  Obianuju Acholonu, Chenjerai Hove, Gabriel Gbadmosi
unnumberedCheney-Coker, Syl1990The Blood in the Desert's Eye
unnumberedChipasula, Frank M.1991Whispers in the Wings
unnumbered Amechi Akwanya 1991Orimili
unnumberedGordimer, Nadine1991Crimes of Conscience: Selected Short Stories
unnumberedVassanji, M. G.1993Uhuru Street & other Stories, includes  "In the Quiet of a Sunday Afternoon",  "Ali", "Alzira", "The Beggar", "For a Shilling", "The Relief from Drill", "The Driver", "English Lessons", "The Sounds of the Night", "Leaving", "Breaking Loose", "What Good Times We Had", "Ebrahim and the Businessman", "The London-returned", "Refugee", "All Worlds are Possible Now".
unnumberedOjaide, Tanure1991The Blood of Peace and other poems
unnumberedAchebe, C., and C. L. Innes1992Book of Contemporary African Short Stories
unnumberedOsundare, Niyi1992Selected Poems
unnumberedMwangi, Ursula1992Striving for the Wind
unnumberedLaing, Kojo1992Major Gentl and Achimota Wars
unnumberedBandele-Thomas, Biyi1992The Man Who Came In From The Back Of Beyond
unnumberedOusmane, Sembene1992Niiwam and Taaw
unnumberedHove, Chenjerai1992Shadows
unnumberedZeleza, Tiyambe1992Smouldering Charcoal
unnumberedTuma, Hama1993The Case of the Socialist Witchdoctor and other stories includes  "By Way of a Prologue", "The Case of the Illiterate Saboteur", "The Case of the Valliant Torturer",  "The Case of the Criminal Thought", "The Case of the Queue Breaker", "The Case of the Treacherous Alphabet", "The Case of the Professor of Insanity", "The Case of the Closet Racist", "The Case of the Presumptuous Novelist", "The Case of the Prison-Mongerer", "The Case of the Incurable Hedonist", "Vendetta", "Betrayal", "It happened in Russia", "Death of a Renegade", "Tales of the Highway Fire", "The Professional", "The Zar Who Liked Human Liver", "In 'The Bar of No Surprises'", "Ten on the Terror Scale", "The Waldiba Story", "Madman, Killer , Saint, You".
unnumberedBandele-Thomas, Biyi1993The Sympathetic Undertaker and Other Dreams
unnumberedJacobs, Steve1993Under the Lion
unnumberedBotha, W. P. B.1993The Reluctant Playwright
unnumberedKarodia, Farida1993A Shattering of Silence
unnumberedBruner, Charlotte (ed)1993African Women's Writing, including contributions from Catherine Obianuju Acholonu, Ifeoma Okoye, Zaynab Alkali, Orlanda Amarilis, Aminata Maiga Ka, Awuor Ayoda, Violet Dias Lannoy, Daisy Kabagarama, Lina Magaia, Ananda Devi, Tstitsi Dangerembga, Bessie Head, Jean Marquard, Zoe Wicomb, Sheila Fugard, Farida Karodia, Nawal el Sadaawi, Assia Djebar, Gisele Halimi, Leila Sebbar, Andree Chedid
unnumberedMapanje, Jack1993The Chattering Wagtails of Mikuyu Prison
unnumberedMahjoub, Jamal1994Wings of Dust
unnumberedHirson, Denis (ed), with Trump, Martin1994South African Short Stories, including contributions from  Njabulo Ndebele, Dugmore Boetie, Ernst Havemann, Jack Cope, Elise Muller, Herman Charles Bosman, Breyten Breytenbach, Ivan Vladislavic, Hennie Aucamp, Etienne van Heerden, Bartho Smit, Can Themba, Bheki Maseko, Mango Tshabangu, Dan Jacobson, Nadine Gordimer, Ahmed Essop, Bessie Head, Christopher Hope, Alan Paton, Zoe Wicomb
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994In the Ditch
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994Second-class Citizen
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994Head Above Water
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994 Gwendolen
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994 Kehinde
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1994 Destination Biafra
unnumberedChimombo, Steve1994Napolo and the Python
unnumberedSam, Agnes1994Jesus is Indian and other stories, including  "High Heel", "Jesus is Indian", "Poppy", "A Bag of Sweets", "A Well-Loved Woman", "Nana and Devi", "Sunflowers", "Two Women", "Innocents", "The Seed", "Jellymouse", "Maths", "The Story Teller", "And They Christened It Indenture"
unnumberedCouto, Mia1994Every Man is a Race
unnumbered Tansi, Sony Lab'ou 1995The Seven Solitudes of Lorsa Lopes
unnumberedBeyala, Calixthe1995Loukoum, or the "Little Prince" of Belville
unnumberedDarko, Amma1995 Beyond the Horizon
unnumberedHead, Bessie1995The Cardinals with Meditations and other stories, including "Earth and Everything", "Africa", "My Home", "A Personal View of the Survival of the Unfittest", "Where is the Hour of the Beautiful Dancing of the Birds in the Sun-Wind?", "Poor man", "Earth Love".
unnumberedChipasula, Stella and Frank (eds)1995African Women's Poetry, includes contributions by Daniele Amrane, Leila Djibali, Ana Greki, Malika O'Lahsen, Queen Hatshepsut,  Andree Chedid, Malak'Abd al-Aziz, Joyce Mansour, Rachida Madani, Amina Said, Irene Assiba d'Almeida, Ama Ata Aidoo, Abena P.A. Busia, Rashidah Ismaili, Molara Ogunidpe Leslie, Maria Manuela Margrido, Alda do Espirito Santo, Annette M'Baye d'Erneville, Marina Gashe, Marjorie Oludhe Macgoye, Mwana Kupona binti Msham, Micere Githae Mugo, Stella M Chipasula, Shakuntala Hawoldar, Assumpta Acam-Oturu, Alda Lara, Maria Eugenia Lima, Amelia Veiga, Gwendolen C Konie, Noemia de Sousa, Jeni Couzeyn, Ingrid de Kok, Amelia Blossom Pegram, Ingrid Jonker, Lindiwe Mabuza, Zindzi Mandela, Geina Mhlophe, Phumzile Zulu, Kristina Rungano
unnumberedCollen, Lindsey1995The Rape of Sita
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1995The Slave Girl
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi1995The Bride Price
unnumberedJacobs, Steve1995The Enemy Within
unnumberedBotha, W. P. B.1995Wantok
unnumberedSobott-Mogwe, Gaele1995Colour Me Blue, includes "Telling Stories", "Rendering up the Glebe", "Hello, Goodbye", "Jomo", "Five to One", "Motho Fela", "The Road Ahead", "Bahmumagading", "In Confinement", "Hide Them Under The Bed", "The Battle of Jericho", "Colour Me Blue", "Mare", "Smile of Fortune", "Another Little Peace of our Hearts", "Dread", "The Birds in her Garden", "Revenge is Sweet".
unnumberedBeyala, Calixthe1996Your Name Shall Be Tanga
unnumberedBeyala, Calixthe1996The Sun Hath Looked Upon Me
unnumberedAccad, Evelyn1996Wounding Words: A Woman's Journal
unnumberedPepetela1996Yaka
unnumberedMahjoub, Jamal1996In the Hour of Signs
unnumberedJacobs, Rayda1996The Eyes of the Sky
unnumberedBotha, W. P. B1997A Duty of Memory
unnumberedDarko, Amma1998The Housemaid
unnumberedKanengoni, Alexander1998Echoing Siliences
unnumberedKing-Aribisala, Karen1998Kicking Tongues
unnumberedKwakye, Benjamin1998The Clothes of Nakedness
unnumbered Vera, Yvonne 1999Opening Spaces: Contemporary African Women's Writing, including contributions by Ama Ata Aidoo, Melissa Tandiwe Myambo, Lindsey Collen, Farida Karodia, Norma Kitson, Veronique Tadjo, Leila Abouela, Ifeoma Okoye, Lilia Momple, Sindiwe Magona, Chiedza Musengezi, Monde Sifusniso, Gugu Ndlovu, Anna Dao, Milly Jafta
unnumbered Oguine, Ike 2000 A Squatter's Tale
unnumberedNdibe, Okey2000Arrows of Rain
unnumberedEmecheta, Buchi2000The New Tribe
unnumberedSinyangwe, Binwell2000A Cowrie of Hope
unnumberedChinodya, Shimmer2001Dew in the Morning
unnumberedAbouela, Leila2001The Translator
unnumberedAndreas, Neshani2001The Purple Violet of Oshaantu
unnumberedMomplé, Lilia2001Neighbours: the story of a murder
unnumberedChinodya, Shimmer2001Can We Talk and Other Stories,  including "Hoffman Street", "The Man Who Hanged Himself", "Going to See Mr B.V.", "Among the Dead", "Brothers and Sisters", "Snow", "The Waterfall", "Play Your Cards", "Strays", "Bramson", "Can We Talk".
unnumberedTadjo, Veronique2001As the Crow Flies
unnumberedTadjo, Veronique2002The Shadow of Imana: Travels in the Heart of Rwanda
unnumberedAidoo, Ama Ata2002The Girl Who Can and Other Stories, including "Her Hair Politics – a very short story", "Choosing – a moral of the world of work", "The Girls WHO Can", "Comparisons or Who Said a Bird Cannot Aather a Crab?", "Nutty", "She-Who-Would-Be-King (with apology to Rudyard Kipling", "Heavy Moments", "Some Global News - A short-four-voice report", "About the Wedding Feast", "Lice", "Payments", "Male-ing Names in the Sun", "Newly-Opened Doors", "Nowhere Cool".
unnumberedMapanje, Jack (ed)2002Gathering Seaweed: African Prison Writing, including contributions from Kenneth D. Kaunda, Agostinho Neto, Oginga Odinga, Kwame Nkrumah, Jomo Kenyatta, Eddison J. Zvibogo, Felix Mnthali, Steve Biko, Jeremy Cronin, Moncef Marzouki, Ken Saro-Wiwa, Joseph Mwangi Kariuki, Sam Mpasu, Yves Emmanuel Dogbe, Kwame Safo-Adu, Albie Sachs, Dennis Brutus, Jose Craveirinha, Ahmed Fouad Negm, Wole Soyinka, Kofi Awoonor, Ingopapele Madingoane, Fatima Meer, Edison Mpina, Ogaga Ifowodo, Leila Djabali, Obafemi Owolowo, Molefe Pheto, Tshenuwani Simon Farisani, Abdellatif Laabi, Syl Cheney-Coker, Koigi wa Wamwere, Maina wa Kinyatti, Jack Mapanje, Muhammad Afifi Mattar, Tahar Djaout, Nelson Mandela, Antonio Jacinto, Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Breyten Breytenbach, Ngugi wa Thiong'o, Caesarina Kona Makhoere, Kunle Ajibade, Tandundu E. A. Bisikisi, Pitika Ntuli, Jaki Seroke, Fela Anikulapo-Kutu, Christine Anyanwu, Mzwakhe Mbuli
unnumberedPepetela2002Return of the Water Spirit
unnumberedAidoo, Ama Ata2003Changes: A Love Story
unnumberedMengara, Daniel2003Mema

[21]

Digitisation and relaunch

In 2005 Chadwyck-Healey Literature Collection began to digitise the series, which was completed in 2009.[ citation needed ]

It was then relaunched by Pearson Education in 2011, which began reissuing titles from the original list as 'Classics' and a number of new works. [22] [23] [24]

New titles included:

In 2018 Pearson signed a digital license agreement for the series with Digitalback Book. [25]

The relaunched African Writers Series logo, designed by Stephen Embleton Nov 2021 AWS logo 2021.pdf
The relaunched African Writers Series logo, designed by Stephen Embleton Nov 2021

In December 2021, Abibiman Publishing and the James Currey Society in Oxford announced that the series would be relaunched again. The new series will be edited by the James Currey Fellow at Oxford University, Stephen Embleton. Embleton stated: "Our mandate is clear and threefold: build on the legacy of the original African Writers Series, actively seek works written in African languages, and have the writers of this Continent at the helm." [26]

African Writers Series, logo 2021 African Writers Series Logo 2021.png
African Writers Series, logo 2021

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o</span> Kenyan writer (born 1938)

Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o is a Kenyan author and academic who writes primarily in Gikuyu and who formerly wrote in English. He has been described as having been "considered East Africa's leading novelist". His work includes novels, plays, short stories, and essays, ranging from literary and social criticism to children's literature. He is the founder and editor of the Gikuyu-language journal Mũtĩiri. His short story The Upright Revolution: Or Why Humans Walk Upright, is translated into 100 languages from around the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chinua Achebe</span> Nigerian author and literary critic (1930–2013)

Chinua Achebe was a Nigerian novelist, poet, and critic who is regarded as a central figure of modern African literature. His first novel and magnum opus, Things Fall Apart (1958), occupies a pivotal place in African literature and remains the most widely studied, translated, and read African novel. Along with Things Fall Apart, his No Longer at Ease (1960) and Arrow of God (1964) complete the "African Trilogy". Later novels include A Man of the People (1966) and Anthills of the Savannah (1987). In the West, Achebe is often referred to as the "father of African literature", although he vigorously rejected the characterization.

Gabriel Imomotimi Okara was a Nigerian poet and novelist who was born in Bumoundi in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, Nigeria. The first modernist poet of Anglophone Africa, he is best known for his early experimental novel, The Voice (1964), and his award-winning poetry, published in The Fisherman's Invocation (1978) and The Dreamer, His Vision (2005). In both his poems and his prose, Okara drew on African thought, religion, folklore and imagery, and he has been called "the Nigerian Negritudist". According to Brenda Marie Osbey, editor of his Collected Poems, "It is with publication of Gabriel Okara's first poem that Nigerian literature in English and modern African poetry in this language can be said truly to have begun."

In June 1962 a conference of African literature in the English language, the first African Writers Conference, was held at Makerere University College in Kampala, Uganda. Officially called a "Conference of African Writers of English Expression", it was sponsored by the Congress for Cultural Freedom and the Mbari Club in association with the Department of Extra-Mural Studies of Makerere, whose director was Gerald Moore.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ayi Kwei Armah</span> Ghanaian writer (born 1939)

Ayi Kwei Armah is a Ghanaian writer best known for his novels including The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born (1968), Two Thousand Seasons (1973) and The Healers (1978). He is also an essayist, as well as having written poetry, short stories, and books for children.

Sahle Sellassie Berhane Mariam is an Ethiopian novelist and translator.

Chief Sir Ernest Emenyonu is a Nigerian academic, who is an African literature critic and professor. He was formerly head of the department of English and Literary Studies, Dean of the Faculty of Arts, and Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the University of Calabar, in that order, through the 1980s and 1990s. He was also Provost of Alvan Ikoku College of Education now Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Educationˌ Owerri in Imo stateˌ Nigeria (1992–1995).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heinemann (publisher)</span> British book publisher

William Heinemann Ltd., with the imprint Heinemann, was a London publisher founded in 1890 by William Heinemann. Their first published book, 1890's The Bondman, was a huge success in the United Kingdom and launched the company. He was joined in 1893 by Sydney Pawling. Heinemann died in 1920 and Pawling sold the company to Doubleday, having worked with them in the past to publish their works in the United States. Pawling died in 1922 and new management took over. Doubleday sold his interest in 1933.

Bankole Ajibabi Omotoso, also known as Kole Omotoso, was a Nigerian writer and intellectual best known for his works of fiction and in South Africa as the "Yebo Gogo man" in adverts for the telecommunications company Vodacom. His written work is known for its dedication and commitment to fusing a socio-political reappraisal of Africa and respect for human dignity into most of his works.

<i>Arrow of God</i> 1964 novel by Chinua Achebe

Arrow of God, published in 1964, is the third novel by Chinua Achebe. Along with Things Fall Apart and No Longer at Ease, it is considered part of The African Trilogy, sharing similar settings and themes. The novel centres on Ezeulu, the chief priest of several Igbo villages in colonial Nigeria, who confronts colonial powers and Christian missionaries in the 1920s. The novel was published as part of the influential Heinemann African Writers Series.

Simon E. Gikandi is a Kenyan Literature Professor and Postcolonial scholar. He is the Class of 1943 University Professor of English at Princeton University. He is perhaps best known for his co-editorship of The Cambridge History of African and Caribbean Literature. He has also done important work on the modern African novel, and two distinguished African novelists: Chinua Achebe and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o. In 2019 he became the president of the Modern Language Association.

<i>Hopes and Impediments</i> 1988 essay collection by Chinua Achebe

Hopes and Impediments: Selected Essays, 1965-1987 is collection of essays by Chinua Achebe, published in 1988.

Henry Chakava is a Kenyan publisher. He has focused on the publication of books particularly in East Africa and has been called "the father of Kenyan publishing". For his contribution to educational and cultural literature in his region, he has received several awards.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Currey</span>

James Currey is a former academic publisher specialising in African Studies which since 2008 has been an imprint of Boydell & Brewer. It is named after its founder who established the company in 1984. It publishes on a full spectrum of topics—including anthropology, archaeology, history, politics, economics, development studies, gender studies, literature, theatre, film studies, and the humanities and social sciences generally—and its authors include leading names such as Bethwell Ogot and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o.

<i>Burning Grass</i>

Burning Grass is a novel by Nigerian author Cyprian Ekwensi. It was published in 1962 as the second book in Heinemann's African Writers Series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rebeka Njau</span> Kenyan educator, writer and textile artist (born 1932)

Rebeka Njau was Kenya's first female playwright and a pioneer in the representation of African women in literature. Her writing has addressed topics such as female genital mutilation and homosexuality. Her first novel, Ripples in the Pool (1975), appeared as number 203 in the Heinemann African Writers Series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">From a Crooked Rib</span>

From a Crooked Rib is a 1970 novel by Somali writer Nuruddin Farah. It was Farah’s debut and was published as the 80th book in Heinemann's African Writers Series.

Phanuel Egejuru is a Nigerian writer and academician, whose areas of focus are composition, short fiction, Black literature and aesthetics, 19th-century British fiction and Victorian England. She is best known for her 1993 novel The Seed Yams Have Been Eaten.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">A Naked Needle</span>

A Naked Needle is a 1976 novel by Somali writer Nuruddin Farah. It was Farah's second English language novel and was published as the 184th book in Heinemann's African Writers Series.

Gordon Douglas Killam (1930-2020), known to friends as Doug Killam, was a Canadian scholar of African literature.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Bejjit, Nourdin (2009). The Publishing of African literature: Chinua Achebe, Ngugi wa Thiong'o and the Heinemann African Writers Series 1962 - 1988 (phd thesis). The Open University. doi:10.21954/ou.ro.0000eb1c.
  2. Hill, Alan (1988). In pursuit of publishing. London: J. Murray in association with Heinemann Educational Books. p. 120. ISBN   0-7195-4434-3. OCLC   23769680.
  3. Currey, James (2008). Africa writes back : the African writers series & the launch of African literature. Oxford: James Currey. pp. xxx–xxxi. ISBN   978-0-8214-1843-7. OCLC   230198710.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Bejjit, Nourdin (2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 14. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Currey, James (2008). Africa writes back : the African writers series & the launch of African literature. Oxford: James Currey. pp. xxx–xxxi. ISBN   978-0-8214-1843-7. OCLC   230198710.
  6. 1 2 Hill, Alan (1971). "The African Writers Series". Research in African Literatures. 2 (1): 18–19. ISSN   0034-5210.
  7. Hill, Alan (1988). In pursuit of publishing. London: J. Murray in association with Heinemann Educational Books. p. 123. ISBN   0-7195-4434-3. OCLC   23769680.
  8. 1 2 Bejjit, Nourdin (6 September 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 15. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  9. Bejjit, Nourdin (6 September 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 21. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  10. Bejjit, Nourdin (6 September 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 22. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  11. Bejjit, Nourdin (6 September 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 23. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  12. 1 2 Bejjit, Nourdin (6 September 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 24. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  13. Bejjit, Nourdin (6 June 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 17–18. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  14. "Heinemann African Writers Series" Archived April 29, 2015, at the Wayback Machine at African Studies Centre, Leiden.
  15. Bejjit, Nourdin (6 June 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 20. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  16. 1 2 Bejjit, Nourdin (6 June 2019). "Heinemann African Writers Series: History, editorship, and markets". Logos. 30 (1): 15–24. doi:10.1163/18784712-03001003. ISSN   0957-9656.
  17. "Judged by Its Covers | Josh MacPhee". Lapham's Quarterly. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  18. Clarke, Becky (2003). "The African Writers Series: Celebrating Forty Years of Publishing Distinction". Research in African Literatures. 34 (2): 164. ISSN   0034-5210.
  19. Currey, James (2008). Africa writes back : the African writers series & the launch of African literature. Oxford: James Currey. pp. 301–310. ISBN   978-0-8214-1843-7. OCLC   230198710.
  20. 1 2 3 4 Matt Kibble, The Digitisation of the African Writers Series.
  21. James., Currey (2008). Africa writes back : the African writers series & the launch of African literature. Oxford: James Currey. ISBN   9780821418437. OCLC   230198710.
  22. "Pearson revives African Writers Series, calls for submissions". Archived 21 September 2016 at the Wayback Machine , Naija Stories, 4 August 2011.
  23. Norbrook, Nicholas (29 February 2012). "Publishing Africa Writers Series celebrates 50 years". The Africa Report.
  24. "A celebrated selection of literature from Africa" Archived 2014-10-27 at the Wayback Machine , Pearson.
  25. "Digitalback Books acquires a license for the iconic Heinemann African Writers Series!". us15.campaign-archive.com. Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  26. "Abibiman Publishing and the James Currey Society are relaunching the African Writers Series. Read our press release and objectives". Twitter. 11 December 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2022.