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Yoruba Boy Running

A Novel

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"A true artist. A brilliant writer. An original thinker."—Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

A captivating, fictionalized retelling of African linguist and clergyman Samuel Ajayi Crowther's miraculous journey from slave to liberator.

"Run, Àjàyí, run!"

When Malian slave traders invaded the Nigerian town of Òsogùn, thirteen-year-old Àjàyí's life is split in two.

Before, there was his childhood, surrounded by friends and family, watched over by the ancient Yorùbá gods of forest and water, earth and sky.

After, there was capture, slavery—and eventually release—with Àjàyí, left transfigured, unrecognizable, and now, inthe service of a new god, with a new name and a culture different from the one left far behind. Àjàyí becomes Samuel Crowther—missionary, linguist, minister, and eventually abolitionist, driven to negotiate against his own people to end the evil trade in human beings which destroyed his family and transformed his own life.

Drawing on the prolific writings of Samuel Ajayi Crowther, novelist and filmmaker Biyi Bándélé creates a many-voiced, kaleidoscopic portrait of an extraordinary man. From the heart-stopping drama of Àjàyí's last day of freedom to the farcical intrigue of the Òsogùn court; from a meeting with Queen Victoria to consecration as the first African Bishop of the Anglican Church, Samuel Ajayi Crowther's journey, like all great odysseys, circles back to where he began. By turns witty, moving and revolutionary, Biyi Bándélé's reimagining of Crowther's life is a brilliant tour de force.

Cover artwork Chris Ofili, Blind Leading Blind, 2005 © The artist.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from October 14, 2024
      Nigerian filmmaker and novelist Bándélé (Burma Boy), who died in 2022, provides a fitting capstone to his career with this astonishing novel based on the life of Samuel Àjàyí Crowther (1809–1891), who obtained his freedom from slavery and went on to become the first Black African Anglican bishop. The tale begins in 1821, when 13-year-old Àjàyí is stolen from his Yorùbá village, along with his mother, sister, and best friend, by Malian slavers. From there, Bándélé alternates scenes of heart-pounding suspense with political satire and excerpts from Crowther’s journal. After enduring devastating brutality at the hands of Portuguese slavers in Lagos, Crowther and some 200 other enslaved men, women, and children are loaded on to a vessel and prepared to be shipped across the Atlantic. Before departing, however, their boat is captured by the British, who have outlawed the slave trade. Crowther is sent to make a new life for himself in Sierra Leone, where his abolitionist speeches attract attention from English missionaries, who encourage him to study at Oxford. He goes on to meet Queen Victoria and Prince Albert, translates the Bible and the Book of Common Prayer, and, in a dramatic and complex scene, pressures a king in Lagos to sign a treaty that will prohibit the slave trade at the price of ceding an island to the British Crown. It’s an unforgettable chronicle of an extraordinary man. Agent: Veronica Goldstein, UTA.

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  • English

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