Search This Blog

Sunday, March 13, 2022

Chronicles From The Land of The Happiest People On Earth by Wole Soyinka

This is an uncomfortable book to read. It goes beyond satire to a place that is almost on par with Dante's inferno. I read that the author renounced his United States citizenship after the 2016 election, when an openly racist, xenophobic misogynist was elected to the highest office, and he may as a result feel a bit stateless. The book tells the multidimensional story of a secret society dealing in human parts for sacrificial uses, whose members encompass the highest political and religious figures in the land. It details how the conspiracy and cover-up of this quasi-organization affect not only the life of the nation but, more specifically, the lives of four friends. This is essentially a whistleblower’s book. It is a novel that explodes criminal racketeering of a sinister and deadly kind that is operating in an African nation uncomfortably similar to Nigeria. It is a vivid and wild romp through a political landscape riddled with corruption and opportunism and a spiritual landscape riddled with fraudulence and, even more disquietingly, state-sanctioned murder. It is a difficult read that will leave you thinking for days if not more.

No comments:

Post a Comment