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She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore
She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore













She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore

Children are flogged, men beaten raw, women visited in the night by the men who own them.

She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore

All of this is grimly and powerfully evoked. Shot through with magic realism, it conjures up a phantasmagoric vision of the diaspora and its “infinity of broken men” that is grounded in the quotidian horrors of plantation life (“That place where we lost our language, lost ourselves”). Wayétu Moore’s compelling debut novel assembles this trio of superhumans on Liberian soil during the waning days of the American Colonization Society’s mission to repatriate freed slaves there. June Dey is a runaway slave from a Virginia plantation, who fought his way out by flinging off attackers, dogs and bullets alike with supernatural strength, then boarded a ship he thought was bound for New York only to wash up on Africa’s Grain Coast instead. Norman Aragorn sails from Jamaica after escaping his father, an odious British “scholar” who kept Norman and his enslaved mother captive, drooling over the chance to make his name by documenting their ability to vanish at will. She limps home five dry seasons later, having discovered that she cannot die. Gbessa, a member of the Vai tribe, has been cursed as a witch and banished to an otherworldly forest where “yellow and plum-coloured insects piloted through the heat amid the shouts of forest beasts and spectres”. T hree strangers with supernatural powers meet in Liberia’s capital Monrovia in the middle of the 19th century.















She Would Be King by Wayétu Moore