07 July 2010

Olufemi Terry wins "African Booker"

The Caine Prize for African Writing, an annual prize awarded to an author of African origin who has published a short story in English, has bestowed its honor (and it's £10,000 (approx $15,000) prize) on Olufemi Terry for his short story "Stickfighting Days" on July 5.

"Stickfighting Days" tells the story of glue-sniffing young boys who wage playtime wars in a dump in Nairobi. It is the second short story that Terry has written, and it was published in the African magazine Chimurenga (vol. 12/13).

Terry, who was born in Sierra Leone and now lives in Cape Town, South Africa, has lived, worked, and studied in Nigeria, the United Kingdom, Côte d'Ivoire, the United States, Kenya, Somalia, and Uganda. A journalist by profession, Terry generally writes about the African diaspora. With his winnings, he hopes to focus on completing a novel tentatively titled The Sum of All Loses.

The Caine Prize for African Writing, frequently called the "African Booker," has been administered every year since 2000. The judges include Fiommetta Rocco, literary editor of The Economist, who called Terry a "talent with an enormous future" and described his story as "ambitious, brave and hugely imaginative ... present[ing] a heroic culture that is Homeric in its scale and conception."

Follow this link to learn more and to purchase the issue of Chimurenga featuring Terry's story.

1 comment:

  1. Congratulations to Olufemi Terry, 2010 winner, and the other nominees! Olufemi Terry's 'Stickfighting Days', along with the four other nominated stories and stories written at this year’s Caine Prize workshop, is published in the book Life in Full and other stories, now available from New Internationalist Publications (http://www.newint.org/publications/caine-prize-2010/).

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