Seesaw
By (Author) Timothy Ogene
Swift Press
Swift Press
10th January 2023
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
A 'recovering writer' - his first novel having been littered with typos and selling only fifty copies - Frank Jasper is plucked from obscurity in Port Jumbo in Nigeria by Mrs Kirkpatrick, a white woman and wife of an American professor, to attend the prestigious William Blake Program for Emerging Writers in Boston.
Once there, however, it becomes painfully clear that he and the other Fellows are expected to meet certain obligations as representatives of their 'cultures.' His colleagues, veterans of residencies in Europe and America, know how to play up to the stereotypes expected of them, but Frank isn't interested in being the African Writer at William Blake - any anyway, there is another Fellow, Barongo Akello Kabumba, who happily fills that role.
Eventually expelled from the fellowship for 'non-performance' and 'non-participation,' Frank Jasper sets off on trip to visit his father's college friend in Nebraska - where he learns not only surprising truths about his father, but also how to parlay his experiences into a lucrative new career once he returns to Nigeria: as a commentator on American life...
Seesaw is an energetic comedy of cultural dislocation - and in its humour, intelligence and piety-pricking, it is a refreshing and hugely enjoyable act of literary rebellion.
'A witty and warm satire...Ogene sticks it to the literary classes as our hero negotiates the complexities of the cultural exchange between cosmopolitan Africa and the western world' - Jamal Mahjoub, author of The Fugitives
'This send-up of modern academia is good knockabout fun' - John Self, The Times
'A wickedly funny and utterly disruptive novel that offers us a lens through which to see ourselves and society, without filters' - Ukamaka Olisakwe, author of Ogadinma: Or, Everything Will Be All Right
Timothy Ogene was raised in the outskirts of Port Harcourt in southern Nigeria. He has since lived in Liberia, the UK and the US, and is now a Lecturer in African Literary and Cultural Studies at Harvard. His first novel, The Day Ends Like Any Day, was awarded Book of the Year by the African Literature Association. Seesaw is his second novel.