Qui a peur de la mort ?

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Nnedi Okorafor: Qui a peur de la mort ? (French language, 2017)

French language

Published March 16, 2017

ISBN:
978-2-36629-854-3
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4 stars (4 reviews)

Dans une Afrique post-apocalyptique, la guerre continue de faire rage. Enfant du viol, rejetée par les siens du fait de sa peau et ses cheveux couleur de sable, Onyesonwu porte en elle autant de colère que d’espoir. Seule sa mère ne semble pas étonnée lorsqu’elle se met à développer les prémices d’une magie unique et puissante. Lors de l’un de ses voyages dans le monde des esprits, elle se rend compte qu’une terrible force cherche à lui nuire. Pour en triompher, elle devra affronter son destin, sa nature, la tradition et comprendre enfin le nom que sa mère lui a donné : Qui a peur de la mort.

5 editions

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Vibrant and raw

No rating

I looked it up, "Who Fears Death" isn't a debut novel, but it feels like a debut novel in the best possible way. It's emotionally raw, and slightly unfinished in the sense that you can feel the author poured all her ideas and feelings and all the themes she wanted to explore into this book to the point she couldn't possibly get to all of them. The result is something that's brimming with creativity and life. While the book reads mostly like something targeted at a YA audience, it's frank and direct in its discussion of sex and female sexuality in a way that you wouldn't expect to see outside of adult literature, but it lends a lot of power to the story overall. This is something that matters to the author, and you can tell.

The setting in which magic exists next to the left-over technology from an implied …

reviewed Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor (Who Fears Death, #1)

Who Fears Death, indeed.

No rating

Very excited to finally start this novel after it spent about a decade languishing on my to-read list, featuring a main character with one of the most badass names ever. (It reminds me of Fela Kuti, didn't he give himself a name that meant something like "He who keeps death in his pouch"? Always loved that.)

Au sud du Sahara, après l'apocalypse

5 stars

Un style écrit brut et direct, d’où les émotions fusent, abordant des sujets extrêmement durs. Des figures féminines qui conservent leur capacité d’agir envers et contre tous, en dépit des violences et du poids d’une société patriarcale étouffante. Un univers mythologique dense, investissant et explorant les imaginaires du sud du Sahara. Une lecture éprouvante, qui m'a happé et dont le souvenir va m'accompagner durablement.

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rated it

3 stars