Search Sweet Country follows the lives of an eclectic, interconnected group of Ghanaians living in and around the sprawling, chaotic city of Accra in the mid-1970s.
Kojo Laing was born on the Gold Coast, Ghana, in 1946, studied in Glasgow, Scotland, in the 1960s, before returning to Accra, where he would spend the rest of his life as a novelist, poet and educator. A writer of soaring originality and pioneer of Afrofuturism, his Search Sweet Country (1986) won numerous awards, vast critical acclaim, and has been praised as 'the finest novel written in English ever to come out of the African continent' (Binyavanga Wainaina).
Surreal and satirical ... Laing has found an original voice that is
all the stronger for making few concessions to the Western reader:
wild, sophisticated, sorrowful
*New York Times*
Gleefully energetic ... there is an extravagant hopefulness in Kojo
Laing
*London Review of Books*
Laing pushed the English language to its limits and beyond, by
fusing Oxbridge English with West African Pidgin, elements from
African languages and his own coinings, aiming at creating one
gigantic, living and truly cosmopolitan language ... A treasure
trove of imagery and refelctions which are just as amusing,
relevant and thought-provoking as when they were written
*The Voice*
Kojo Laing is one of the unsung heroes of African fiction. His
prose is poetic, densely packed with strange juxtapositions and
more ideas on one page than most writers use for several books.
Search Sweet Country is an amazing achievement
*Johannesburg Review of Books*
Reading Search Sweet Country is like reading a dream ... Each page
delivers an intense blast of vivid imagery, a world in which
landscapes come to life when inanimate objects receive human
characterization ... Laing is a master stylist, and Search Sweet
Country delivers an absorbing, if demanding, world for both its
characters and the reader
*Slate Magazine*
An intricate, beautifully rambling novel ... a compelling and
rewarding read
*Publishers Weekly*
Search Sweet Country can be read over and over, continually
surprising with a fresh turn of phrase or nuance in character,
always engaging, always beautiful. The search is worthwhile
*Pittsburgh Gazette*
Exuberantly reels with language and imagery reminiscent of the
early Joyce
*Library Journal*
A figurative, comic treat, filled with wild characters and dizzy,
wink-filled prose
*FlavorWire*
African literature's greatest linguistic innovator
*Brittle Paper Magazine*
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