Ama Ata Aidoo

No Sweetness Here and Other Stories

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From the author of Changes: these stories “of post-independence Ghana in the late 1960s are written beautifully and wisely and with great subtlety” (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichi).
In this short story collection, the award-winning poet and author of Changes and Our Sister Killjoy explores postcolonial life in Ghana with her characteristic honesty, humor, and insight. A house servant wonders what independence means in a country where indoor plumbing is still reserved for bosses. A brother tracks down his runaway sister only to find she has become a prostitute. In the title story, a bitter divorce turns tragic when the couple’s only child dies of a snake bite.
In these and other stories, tradition wrestles with new urban influences as Africans try to sort out their identity in a changing culture, and “even at her gravest, Miss Aidoo writes with a sunny charm” (The New York Times).
This book is currently unavailable
175 printed pages
Original publication
2015
Publication year
2015
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Quotes

  • manstevo52has quoted2 days ago
    ending up with quoting Dr. Aggrey.
    So this evening too, I was delayed: but it was as well, for when I arrived at the hut, Maami Ama had just arrived from the farm. The door opened, facing the village, and so I could see her. Oh, that picture is still vivid in my mind. She was sitting on a low stool with her load before her. Like all the loads the other women would bring from the farms into their homes, it was colourful with miscellaneous articles. At the very bottom of the wide wooden tray were the cassava and yam tubers, rich muddy brown, the colour of the earth. Next were the plantain, of the green colour of the woods from which they came. Then there were the gay vegetables, the scarlet pepper, garden eggs, golden pawpaw and crimson tomatoes. Over this riot of colours the little woman’s eyes were fixed, absorbed, while the tiny hands delicately picked the pepper. I made a scratchy noise at the door. She looked up and smiled. Her smile was a wonderful flashing whiteness.
    ‘Oh Chicha, I have just arrived.’
    ‘So I see. Ayekoo.’
    ‘Yaa, my own. And how are you, my child?’
    ‘Very well, Mother. And you?’
    ‘Tanchiw. Do sit down, there’s a stool in that corner. Sit down. Mmmm. . . . Life is a battle. What can we do? We are just trying, my daughter.’
    ‘Why were you longer at the farm today?’
    ‘After weeding that plot I told you about last week, I thought I would go for one or two yams.’
    ‘Ah!’ I cried.
    ‘You know tomorrow is Ahobaa. Even if one does not feel happy, one must have some yam for old Ahor.’
    ‘Yes. So I understand. The old saviour de
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