Truth is a flightless Bird

Akbar Hussain

Truth is a flightless Bird

Description

President Obama's impending arrival to Nairobi is the electric backdrop to this dazzling debut, Truth is a Flightless Bird (TIFB). Yet, beneath the glittering celebrations, beats the pulse of a city aflame. It is into this crucible that Nice (real name Theresa) lands, fleeing her Somali drug-dealer boyfriend, her brutal UN work in Mogadishu, and the life choices stalking her. So desperate is she to flee that she involves one of her oldest friends, Duncan, an American pastor heading a church in Nairobi. On the way back from the airport, their car crashes, and Nice is abducted by a crooked immigration cop, Hinga. Duncan awakes after the car crash to find himself captive to the sociopathic Hinga, and the charmingly amoral Ciru. Plucked from his middle class bubble, Duncan must plunge into the moral complexities of the under-city to rescue Nice. But how deep can Duncan go, without destroying his faith, and himself? TIFB is a brutal love letter to the frontier town that is present-day Nairobi: a studied observation of the the failures of bare-knuckled capitalism, the inequality machines our cities have become, and - ultimately - the profoundly irrational human capacity to hope, to risk everything in order to have something in which to believe. With TIFB, Hussain establishes a remarkable voice, one truly his own


Review

I try as much as I can to not be mean when reviewing a book in a public space but all I can say is that this book probably has a fanbase but I'm definitely not part of them. I felt like it was too complex for something that could have been straight foward. I started this book on september 17th but I'm reviewing this on the 20th of October; most times when I take this long to complete a book, it's usually because I was working or was involved in my several random hobbies but this time that wasn't the case. The only reason I didn't drop this book was my almost painful desire to complete every book I pick up regardless of how it is. So at some point it was just a chore I needed to complete.

If you read the description and it appeals to you, please go ahead but don't accuse me of recommending it.

Review date:20th October, 2023

More Reviews