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Blackass by A Igoni Barrett review – vivid vignettes

Written By Unknown on Sunday, August 2, 2015 | 9:04 AM

A black man wakes up (almost) entirely white in this gripping debut novel

“Everything changes, nothing perishes,” wrote Ovid in Metamorphoses, a chapter epigraph to this gripping debut novel, which energetically explores the theme of change, from physical mutations to changes of mind and sudden changes of fortune. On the morning of a job interview, Furo Wariboko wakes up in Lagos to find that he has turned into a white man with green eyes and red hair, but a particular body part remains black. The narrative incisively charts how people respond to his ostensibly new race.

The author, also a short-story writer, excels at vivid vignettes, and although the parts don’t quite cohere into a convincing whole, this is a memorable, richly allusive story, skilfully interweaving thoughts from Kafka to the poet Elizabeth Bishop. “I scarcely dared to look / to see what it was I was,” wrote Bishop. Barrett probes not only the surface but the depths of who we are.

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