Binyavanga Wainaina (18 January 1971 - 21 May 2019) was a Kenyan author, journalist and 2002 winner of the Caine Prize for African Writing. In April 2014, Time magazine included Wainaina in its annual Time 100 as one of the "Most Influential People in the World".
[A] Kenyan writer and LGBT activist who made a revolutionary impact
on literature from and about the African continent
*Guardian*
Barbed, playful, inventive . . . African literature would never be
the same . . . An outsize figure on the literary landscape, his
omnivorous brilliance matched by ambition and vision on a
continental scale
*The New York Times*
A collection of brilliant writing - essays, stories, journalism,
and even recipes. I admire Wainaina's humour, flamboyance and
intelligence and the way he skewers the usual stereotypes about
Africa
*Times*
[An] award-winning Kenyan writer whose humorous, incisive books and
essays explored themes of post-colonialism, gender and sexual
identity . . . with wit and humour he took apart the paternalism of
certain writers who talk of Africa as one country
*Independent*
He was an intellectual . . . Someone who could have become the
Edward Said of Africa or the James Baldwin of our time
*Leila Aboulela*
An uncompromising commentator . . . [Binyavanga Wainaina] shines a
light on his continent without cliché
*Guardian*
[A] barrier-shattering presence in African literature
*Washington Post*
Unflagging in his generosity, unflinching and direct in his
criticism, [Binyavanga] produced work in his short life that will
have impact longer lasting than those whose time here is twice as
long
*Ellah Wakatama Allfrey*
A trail-blazing Kenyan legend
*Al Jazeera*
Hilarious, worldly, biting, flippant, and meaningful
*Africa is a Country*
[A] Kenyan literary icon . . . [Binyavanga Wainaina's] work
continues to challenge stereotypes and prejudices about Africa
*The Stream*
[Binyavanga Wainaina's] writing dances beyond the borders of
language, lineage, genre, containment . . . [His] imagination hops,
skips and jumps, in that space of infinite possibilities and worlds
waiting to be made and unmade
*Bubblegum Club*
Everything that made Binyavanga so great was there on the page -
his righteous passion, his biting wit, his eye for hypocrisy, his
arch turn of phrase
*Matt Weiland*
Cutting and incisive, witty and confrontational, and deeply
revealing
*Remy Ngamjie*
Wainaina's sharp wit and penetrating analysis . . . shows off his
talent for withering satire
*Publishers Weekly*
Both an ode and an introduction to one of the continent's most
inimitable literary geniuses
*Africa is a Country*
Provocative . . . A lively selection of work that well represents
the scope of this fine author
*Kirkus*
How to Write About Africa gathers vivid, powerful essays and
fiction by the late Kenyan icon
*Open Country*
Glimmering, strobe-lit language . . . a complex, cosmopolitan
African experience too rarely depicted in books
*Teju Cole, author of Open City, on One Day I Will Write About This
Place*
[A] standup-and-cheer coming-of-age memoir
*New York Times Book Review on One Day I Will Write About This
Place*
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