fbpx

Book Club & Reviews

Reviews are in…

Rain, the book’s most prominent symbol, is life and death, is past, present, and future. It is a “living being” both distinct and indistinct from all others. Maya struggles to control and make sense of her gift, to find her footing in the world of Time, because she is still coming to understand the paradoxes here embodied.

Quoting China Achebe in her epigraph —“Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter,” — Adoyo makes clear that she sees her work in the tradition of writers like Achebe and Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o who have sought through their fiction to counter and reverse the hegemonic European perspective on African history.

In the midst of themes both historical and spiritual, what I admired most in Rain was the imagery and musicality of its prose. Adoyo is attentive to sound in language.

Not only the sound, but the imagery is poetic; she combines the senses, whether creating a sense of hope and calm in describing “hearing the light dance on the water” or a sense of horror and chaos in describing the smells of blood and smoke in other passages. Her language is occasionally even playfully self-aware, as when she describes one character’s name as forming “dactylic tetrameter.”

“Rain” asks its reader to expand her definition of narrative, but it also rewards her for doing so… let go of your expectations. Stop trying to fit this book into a box, and just sit back and enjoy the ride.

… READ MORE…

What Readers of Rain are saying…

Readers of Rain are making their voices heard!

“…written in prose, yet it sounds like Rumi!” —Anonymous

Rain’s meditation on life —fleeting, yet eternal— is beautiful in the fullest sense of the word. Its poetic sense of connectivity, in content & in rhythm, feels like the flow of memories in moments past, present & future.” — J. Fowler

“Reading Rain, I have to wonder: are we as Africans just really resilient, or do we simply not understand the disruption and brutality of the colonizers? Every student in school needs to read this book.” — T. Kibor

“…a story of immense beauty & astonishing resilience” — TK

Rain is addictive! A  pure delight to the senses… Listening to Canto 32, I felt like the dust in my soul was being washed away… like my spirit was being cleansed by the poetry of Rain!” — M.M. Green

“Mesmerizing! Rain will take you places!”


Come and Join In!

Sign up to join the Book Club Membership to discuss Rain with fellow readers.

You will receive updates about Rain and related publications including access to exclusive content – live readings and discussions, signed copy giveaways, and audiobook chapters.

Order your copy of Rain – A Song for All and None right here!