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Glory

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Glory by NoViolet Bulawayo

As seen:

  • The Booker Prize Longlist 2022

By NoViolet Bulawayo

avg rating

6 reviews

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This energetic and exhilarating joyride from NoViolet Bulawayo is the story of an uprising, told by a vivid chorus of animal voices that help us see our human world more clearly.

A long time ago, in a bountiful land not so far away, the animals lived quite happily. Then the colonisers arrived. After nearly a hundred years, a bloody War of Liberation brought new hope for the animals – along with a new leader: a charismatic horse who commanded the sun and ruled and ruled – and kept on ruling…

Glory tells the story of a country trapped in a cycle as old as time. And yet, as it unveils the myriad tricks required to uphold the illusion of absolute power, it reminds us that the glory of tyranny only lasts as long as its victims are willing to let it.

Reviews

13 Jan 2023

Annette

"...on top of being denied justice for decades, on top of having her immeasurable pain not acknowledged, there really has been no healing process for Simiso, which is most likely the case for scores of other victims."
The style of this book took me a while to get used to but it is a powerful telling of the history of Zimbabwe, its genocide and the human rights abuses since independence. Harrowing in its telling yet at times also very funny as it pokes fun at dictators and politicians (and not just African ones) and their henchmals.

06 Oct 2022

MoPavich

A story of a revolution taking place in the fictional African nation of Jidada, the ‘Father of the Nation’ is forced out in a coup and usurped by his vice president who goes on to…repeat history and turn into an even worse dictator than the rebels tried to eliminate.

I did find the whole chorus of animal voices narrating the story slightly confusing and hard to get into for the first couple of chapters but that quickly changed. Yes, there are a lot characters but each of them is used with skill, purpose and intent.

Within the sweeping epic tale is the deeply personal story of the young goat, Destiny – my favourite character. Destiny has returned from a long self-imposed exile to find Jidada still in chaos. She and her mother, Simiso, are testament to the lives of women and girls who struggle under oppressive patriarchal systems. It is through the discovery of Destiny’s family history we learn of the deep trauma of genocide in Simiso’s home village but we also find the beautiful roots of Jidada, hidden for so long beneath the hatred, fear and intimidation.

Glory is an impressive piece of writing by an incredibly compelling storyteller. It certainly provoked a vigorous discussion in my bookgroup and ultimately is a very worthy contender for this year’s Booker Prize.

06 Oct 2022

EmmaWeegie

The joy of belonging to a book group is that you read outside your comfort zone, which can turn up gems. The reverse is true as well of course. Personally, I found Glory a struggle to read. I’m not keen on allegory, and sometimes the satire seemed rather laboured.

Having stared off disliking the repetitive nature of some of the book, after a while it became more ‘rhythmic’ to my ear—tuning into the author’s voice, I suppose—and the writing and descriptions were beautiful in parts. You can’t help but admire the author’s ambition in attempting to tell such a ‘big’ story about a nation and I came away from the book determined to read up more on a history and culture I have so little knowledge of.

I enjoyed Destiny’s story (particularly when she returned and had to ‘tune’ back into the place where she came from) and the social media stuff felt very relevant—not just in relation to the fictional country, but as related to all kinds of events these days. And of course it raised a smile when some thinly disguised bigwigs turned up. This is the first time I have seen George Floyd turn up in fiction, and I found that part of the book incredibly moving. The multiple points of view added to the novel too. Most novels published in this century concentrate on only a few, whereas this technique felt as if it was the only way you could tell a story like Glory.

06 Oct 2022

JackPhillipsTRA

Glory by NonViolet Bulawayo: Reviews by Weegie BeeGees for #BookerBookClubChallenge

Astrid Bennett

A political satire with shades of Orwell and old fashioned fables.
Sometimes almost poetic in the language, rhythm and repetition, but I found it a clunky read overall. I felt that the author was trying to get her point across by saying it again. Some passages were very flowing and there was a natural storytelling underlying the ambitious description of a nation's resilience and repeated rebirth.

Claire Squires

In the magic realist tradition of Midnight’s Children and One Hundred Years of Solitude, in Glory NoViolet Bulawayo sets out to do for Zimbabwe what Salman Rushdie did for India, and Gabriel García Marquez for Columbia. A truly nation-building novel, Bulawayo also incorporates the fabular tradition of political fiction. For this is not just an Animal Farm, but an animal nation, with every human in the novel represented by horse, goat, pig, peacock, etc. (leading to some comedic conversations about animal sex in our book group discussions).

It has splashes of farce, violent tragedy, trenchant political critique, and a rolling command of its postcolonial diction; the merging of the colonising language of English (and of the Booker Prize!) with local language and contemporary expression. If this all sounds very serious, there are also meet-cutes in queues, social media savvy, and a very helpful list of penis synonyms. Rally round for this book!

Emma Baird

The joy of belonging to a book group is that you read outside your comfort zone, which can turn up gems. The reverse is true as well of course. Personally, I found Glory a struggle to read. I’m not keen on allegory, and sometimes the satire seemed rather laboured.

Having started off disliking the repetitive nature of some of the book, after a while it became more ‘rhythmic’ to my ear—tuning into the author’s voice, I suppose—and the writing and descriptions were beautiful in parts. You can’t help but admire the author’s ambition in attempting to tell such a ‘big’ story about a nation and I came away from the book determined to read up more on a history and culture I have so little knowledge of.

I enjoyed Destiny’s story (particularly when she returned and had to ‘tune’ back into the place where she came from) and the social media stuff felt very relevant—not just in relation to the fictional country, but as related to all kinds of events these days. And of course it raised a smile when some thinly disguised bigwigs turned up. This is the first time I have seen George Floyd turn up in fiction, and I found that part of the book incredibly moving. The multiple points of view added to the novel too. Most novels published in this century concentrate on only a few, whereas this technique felt as if it was the only way you could tell a story like Glory.

Jackie Copleton

NoViolet Bulawayo takes up the mighty baton of George Orwell’s Animal Farm in her Booker-shortlisted Glory, but offers us an ending in stark contrast to his 1945 masterpiece: the possibility of hope, and this reader thanks her for such light.

This beast fable, as sharp in satire and as affecting in allegory as its predecessor, shares the same lesson of how power corrupts in the most egregious ways, and yet how those who live under tyranny somehow manage to retain their humanity, even if in this book, they are a goat or a cat.

Bulawayo explores the idea that the colonial powers gave Africa her independence but not her freedom, and she doesn’t shy away from asking tough questions at our own culpability. Why do we allow dictators and failed leaders to stay in power for as long as we do?

Covering decades, this book is ambitious in scope and yet remains a deeply individual study of suffering under tyranny. And the writing just over halfway through the book about an unbearable example of brutality and its opposite of compassion, is glorious in the most humane and horrific of ways.

I could say so much more, but rest assured, book groups, this is one of those novels that will spark opinions, stimulate incredible chat and live long in the memory.

Jane Scoular

I liked the plurality of voices, form and perspectives in Bulawayo’s imaginative account of living through Zimbabwe’s political upheaval.

While reminiscent of Animal Farm, the voices, style and energy offers a fresh take on living through, with and against repression.

Lucy Janes

It took me while to adjust to the rhythm of the language and some unfamiliar words but by the end I was really enjoying the repetitions of words and phrases. I thought the animal fable approach was interesting but to me the boundaries of the conceit seemed to have some internal contradictions. There were many different animals (apart from ‘The Defenders’ - the police force - who were all large dogs), but there also black and white animals, and then also different ‘ethnic’ communities in Jidada, all of which I found very puzzling and it niggled away at me the whole way through. I also hated the introduction of elements of our real world into the fable construct, such as texts referring to President Trump, or references to Mugabe Avenue.

Those quibbles aside, I felt it was a compelling and powerfully written book. The most moving parts were Destiny and Simiso’s stories, however they were sections of writing that stepped back to a degree from the animal fable approach. I assume that was deliberate; no novel could survive being at that high emotional pitch the whole way so the fable aspect enabled the storyteller to create some distance from the horror of the people’s situation.

I thought it was a really interesting way to look at the impact of colonialism - forcing people to fight wars against their oppressors and then having to try to grow political systems and governance out of that trauma. There was a hopeful ending but I wasn’t sure it really was the end of the story and could see some of the most complicit and the most malevolent enablers of the past regime returning, including some of the characters that I found most intriguing – the preacher and Dr Sweet Mother – though Nevermiss Nzinga, the hilarious old freedom-fighting, sharp-shooting hen is also on hand to continue to inspire liberation.

Morag Pavich

A story of a revolution taking place in the fictional African nation of Jidada, the 'Father of the Nation' is forced out in a coup and usurped by his vice president who goes on to...repeat history and turn into an even worse dictator than the rebels tried to eliminate.

I did find the whole chorus of animal voices narrating the story slightly confusing and hard to get into for the first couple of chapters but that quickly changed. Yes, there are a lot characters but each of them is used with skill, purpose and intent.

Within the sweeping epic tale is the deeply personal story of the young goat, Destiny - my favourite character. Destiny has returned from a long self-imposed exile to find Jidada still in chaos. She and her mother, Simso, are testament to the lives of women and girls who struggle under oppressive patriarchal systems. It is through the discovery of Destiny's family history we learn of the deep trauma of genocide in Simso’s home village but we also find the beautiful roots of Jidada, hidden for so long beneath the hatred, fear and intimidation.

Glory is an impressive piece of writing by an incredibly compelling storyteller. It certainly provoked a vigorous discussion in my bookgroup and ultimately is a very worthy contender for this year’s Booker Prize.

06 Oct 2022

Senorita Lacey Dalmatian

A story of a revolution taking place in the fictional African nation of Jidada, the 'Father of the Nation' is forced out in a coup and usurped by his vice president who goes on to...repeat history and turn into an even worse dictator than the rebels tried to eliminate. 

I did find the whole chorus of animal voices narrating the story slightly confusing and hard to get into for the first couple of chapters but that quickly changed.  Yes, there are a lot characters but each of them is used with skill, purpose and intent. 

Within the sweeping epic tale is the deeply personal story of the young goat, Destiny - my favourite character.  Destiny has returned from a long self-imposed exile to find Jidada still in chaos.  She and her mother, Simiso, are testament to the lives of women and girls who struggle under oppressive patriarchal systems. It is through the discovery of Destiny's family history we learn of the deep trauma of genocide in Simiso’s home village but we also find the beautiful roots of Jidada, hidden for so long beneath the hatred, fear and intimidation. 

Glory is an impressive piece of writing by an incredibly compelling storyteller.  It certainly provoked a vigorous discussion in my bookgroup and ultimately is a very worthy contender for this year’s Booker Prize.

06 Oct 2022

Lucy Janes

It took me while to adjust to the rhythm of the language and some unfamiliar words but by the end I was really enjoying the repetitions of words and phrases. I thought the animal fable approach was interesting but to me the boundaries of the conceit seemed to have some internal contradictions. There were many different animals (apart from ‘The Defenders’ - the police force - who were all large dogs), but there also black and white animals, and then also different ‘ethnic’ communities in Jidada, all of which I found very puzzling and it niggled away at me the whole way through. I also hated the introduction of elements of our real world into the fable construct, such as texts referring to President Trump, or references to Mugabe Avenue.

Those quibbles aside, I felt it was a compelling and powerfully written book. The most moving parts were Destiny and Simiso’s stories, however they were sections of writing that stepped back to a degree from the animal fable approach. I assume that was deliberate; no novel could survive being at that high emotional pitch the whole way so the fable aspect enabled the storyteller to create some distance from the horror of the people’s situation.

I thought it was a really interesting way to look at the impact of colonialism - forcing people to fight wars against their oppressors and then having to try to grow political systems and governance out of that trauma. There was a hopeful ending but I wasn’t sure it really was the end of the story and could see some of the most complicit and the most malevolent enablers of the past regime returning, including some of the characters that I found most intriguing – the preacher and Dr Sweet Mother – though Nevermiss Nzinga, the hilarious old freedom-fighting, sharp-shooting hen is also on hand to continue to inspire liberation.

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