The Heart of the Leopard Children
The Heart of the Leopard Children
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Indiana University Press
Just the Series: Global African Voices   

Series and Publisher: Global African Voices   

Annotation: Awarded the Prix des Cinq Continents de la Francophonie and the Prix Senghor for the originality of his work, the author captures the sounds, rhythms and pleas of a young man who pulls on the alarm from his prison cell to warn against the multiple barriers of confinement that risk the future of certain sectors of French youth today.
 
Reviews: 1
Catalog Number: #583124
Format: Paperback
Copyright Date: 2016
Edition Date: 2016 Release Date: 07/11/16
ISBN: 0-253-02190-1
ISBN 13: 978-0-253-02190-8
Dewey: 843
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

J'accuse, says the captain. Je confesse, says the prisoner. Mais…. "Africa haunts our black skin," says the narrator of N'Sondé's slender novel, nameless but not voiceless. Congolese born but French by culture and inclination, he lives in a gritty banlieue outside Paris; his best friend, never at home in the country, is in a mental hospital, while his girlfriend has decided to move to Jerusalem without him, and meanwhile he is becoming increasingly aware that like all Africans, he is scarcely tolerated in the colonial homeland. Depressed, he drinks a night away and commits a crime from which there is no return. Now, in jail, he offers a stream-of-consciousness confession to the powers that be, not just the gendarmes, but also his ancestors, who bowed down before the European conqueror and to whom he now importunes, "What kind of legacy have you passed on to us, what wasted freedom, laws executed by those with the most powerful arms?" He is guilty, of course, but not without feeling: his is not the stoical detachment of a Meursault but instead the aggrieved howl of one provoked to do wrong even as he knows he shouldn't have given in to the impulse. Traveling between the France of his experience and the Africa of his imagination, the narrator offers a powerful view of the immigrant, never quite at home, always a stranger in two places. That experience is a bitter one indeed; as he says, nearing the end of his soliloquy, "Yes, gentlemen of the court, I pissed out all my frustrations…my fear of the future, the love that left me, a devastated Congo, my friends' distress, petrol the color of blood, the cement in my veins, rage in my eyes, and the invisible ones I no longer hear." Francophone African writers, like African writers generally, are too little known in this country. This brief but potent tale shows that N'Sondé is one who merits attention.

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Kirkus Reviews

A nameless young man lives in the housing projects outside of Paris. When he was a child, his parents moved with him from the Congo to France, hoping in vain to escape poverty and violence. His best friend, Drissa, is in a psychiatric hospital and now Mireille, his girlfriend, the woman with whom he has shared his childhood and hopes, has left him to reconnect with her Jewish roots in Israel. During a night out to drown the pain of his heartache, there is a fight with a policeman, the policeman dies, and the young man is arrested and taken to jail. Between police beatings and abrupt interrogations, his memory becomes his sole ally to escape from the exiguous space in which he is confined. Half-conscious and delirious, he reflects on his journey from the land of his ancestors to his life in the projects with Drissa and Mireille. In The Heart of the Leopard Children, N'Sond explores the themes of love and pain, belonging and uprooting, desire and fear--all with an implacable and irresistible accuracy. Wilfried N'Sond 's first novel awakens the reader with an urban symphony of desire and lost love, attuned to the violence that accompanies the struggle for social ascension and a sense of belonging, and the paralyzing sentiment of betrayal that inhabits a young man caught between traditions and cultures. Awarded the Prix des Cinq Continents de la Francophonie and the Prix Senghor for the originality of his work, the author captures the sounds, rhythms and pleas of a young man who pulls on the alarm from his prison cell to warn against the multiple barriers of confinement that risk the future of certain sectors of French youth today.


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