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The Hundred Wells of Salaga

A Novel

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Based on true events, a story of courage, forgiveness, love, and freedom in precolonial Ghana, told through the eyes of two women born to vastly different fates.
Aminah lives an idyllic life until she is brutally separated from her home and forced on a journey that transforms her from a daydreamer into a resilient woman. Wurche, the willful daughter of a chief, is desperate to play an important role in her father's court. These two women's lives converge as infighting among Wurche's people threatens the region, during the height of the slave trade at the end of the nineteenth century.
Through the experiences of Aminah and Wurche, The Hundred Wells of Salaga offers a remarkable view of slavery and how the scramble for Africa affected the lives of everyday people.
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    • Kirkus

      October 15, 2018
      The lives of two young women--one kidnapped into slavery, the other a royal whose family is complicit in the slave trade--intersect in pre-colonial Ghana.Despite a peaceful upbringing, 15-year-old Aminah has heard murmurings of horsemen who steal people riding through villages like hers. The rumors soon become a reality--Aminah is violently separated from her family and enslaved--sending her on a harrowing journey. Far from Aminah's village, Wurche, the strong-minded and independent daughter of one of the "three lesser chiefs of Kpembe," is forced to marry, part of her father's strategy to accrue power. (The title refers to the humming market town next to Kpembe where "everything was for sale," including people.) The strength of Attah's (Saturday's Shadows, 2015, etc.) novel is in these two fully realized women, who must navigate their own ever changing circumstances against the backdrop of an increasingly volatile political landscape, in which feuding royals are competing for power among themselves but also with the Germans and the British. Wurche is especially compelling: As the story progresses she becomes increasingly skeptical of the slave trade but is also a participant in it. A "boyish woman," in Aminah's eyes, Wurche's sexuality is as complex as the rest of her, and though Attah doesn't delve as deep here as she might, on the whole it is a rich and nuanced portrayal. The plotting, especially in the book's final third, can feel rushed. Still, Attah is adept at leading readers across the varied terrain of 19th-century Ghana and handles heavy subjects with aplomb.Two memorable women anchor this pleasingly complicated take on slavery, power, and freedom.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2018

      A 2016 Miles Morland Foundation Scholar whose Harmattan Rain was short-listed for the 2010 Commonwealth Writers' Prize, Attah here focuses on two women in precolonial Ghana who might be seen as enemies but together become stronger in their discovery of the other. Aminah lives a bucolic, idealized existence until she is brutally forced from her home. Wurche leads the privileged life of a chief's daughter but recognizes a difference she can make in battling the slave trade at the end of the 19th century. Attah uses these protagonists to challenge prevailing ideas of religion, slavery, and gender roles in Africa at the time. Her view of domestic slavery and especially its consequences for women is one that has rarely been told. But Attah uses the essence of Ghana--its distinctive landscape and the particularities of its people--to demonstrate what this changing time must have felt like. It was, indeed, the end of a civilization. VERDICT Analogous to Tsitsi Dangarembga's Commonwealth Writers' Prize-winning Nervous Conditions, this spacious work will appeal to readers of African and historical fiction.--Ashanti White, Fayetteville, NC

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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