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Chenjerai Hove
(Zimbabwe, 1956)
Chenjerai Hove’s four volumes of poetry – Up in Arms (1982), Red Hills of Home (1985), Rainbows in the Dust (1998) and Blind Moon (2003) – reflect the progression of his ideas and experiences from the hot anger and challenge to colonial repression, through the scrupulous observation of the effects of liberation war on rural communities, to disillusion and bitterness over the failure of the new government’s promises. Hove’s writing is infused with his belief in the people for whom he bears witness, and informed by the excoriating pain of injustice. The Red Hills of Home drew on Hove’s deeply felt moral anguish over the brutalities of Zimbabwe’s war of liberation (1967-80), which he observed while teaching in the rural areas during the period. His first novel, Bones (1988), which won the Noma Award, shows the depth of his empathy for rural people and in particular rural women. If Hove is (or was) a nationalist, he is also fearless observer and outspoken social and cultural critic, and has never shied away from recording the violence of the new Zimbabwe in his fiction, poetry and journalism. Along with the novels Shadows (1994) and Ancestors (1996), Hove’s other work includes two collections of articles written for newspapers: Shebeen Tales (1994) and Palaver Finish (2002), and Guardians of the Soil – meeting Zimbabwe’s elders (with Ilija Trojanow) (1996).
Last updated: Jan 5, 2009
Bibliography
Poetry And Now the Poets Speak. Ed. Zimunya, Musaemura Bonus and Mudariki Kadhani, Mambo Press, Gweru, 1982.Up in Arms. Zimbabwe Publishing House, Harare, 1982. Red Hills of Home. Mambo Press, Gweru, 1985. Rainbows in the Dust. Baobab Books, Harare, 1997. Blind Moon. Weaver Press, Harare, 2003. Fiction Bones. Baobab Books, Harare, 1988. Shadows. Baobab Books, Harare, 1994. Ancestors. College Press, Harare, 1996. Non-fiction Shebeen Tales. Serif, London, and Baobab Books, Harare, 1994. Palaver Finish. Weaver Press, Harare, 2002. (translated into Shona as Zvakwana! and Ndebele as Akudle Inqondo). Links Weaver Press |
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