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THE MAGIC OF SAIDA by M.G. Vassanji

THE MAGIC OF SAIDA

by M.G. Vassanji

Pub Date: March 6th, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-307-96150-1
Publisher: Knopf

Vassanji (The Assassin’s Song, 2007, etc.) employs dense yet splintered prose to mirror the dense yet splintered identity of his multicultural/multiethnic protagonist, a successful Canadian doctor who was born in Tanzania to an African mother and Indian father.

When the novel opens, Kamal lies delusional and near death in a hospital in Tanzania. As he recovers, his new Tanzanian acquaintance, a local publisher, unravels the mystery of what made Kamal so sick. Kamal has returned to Tanzania after 35 years abroad, haunted by his memory of the girl he loved as a child growing up in the village of Kilwa. The girl’s name was Saida, and she was the granddaughter of a local poet of renown, Mzee Omari Tamim, who highly revered Kamal’s Indian grandfather. He and Saida shared the innocent love of childhood, but then, at the age of 11, his mother abruptly sent him away to be raised by Indian relatives in the city; fortunately they turned out to be a loving family, but Kamal has never recovered from his sense of abandonment. The story of Kamal’s childhood in 1950s Africa as a mixed-race child cuts away to his return to present-day Kilwa, where he stays in a ramshackle hotel owned by an expat British owner—the retro echoes of Graham Greene and W. Somerset Maugham play with readers’ expectations in this decidedly contemporary African novel. Kamal has returned to find Saida, the guilty love of his life. Her elderly aunt is reluctant to tell him what she knows, but he persists. Excerpts from Mzee Omari’s poetic history of Tanzania are laced throughout, but the poet’s own story is more complex than it at first appears. In fact, nothing here is as straightforward as it seems: Who was/is Saida, why did Kamal’s mother send him away, and what lies at the source of Mzee Omari’s poetry? And then there is Kamal’s own ambivalence toward his history.

An ambitious, passionate work about racial identity, deracination and the unsolvable mysteries of the human heart.