"Engrossing, beautiful, and deeply imaginative,
Out of Darkness, Shining Light, is a novel that lends voice to those who appeared only as footnotes in history, yet whose final, brave act of loyalty and respect changed the course of it. An incredible and important book by a masterful writer."
--Yaa Gyasi, author of Homegoing "Petina Gappah's
Out of Darkness, Shining Light describes a world on the cusp of change. Her narrators, Halima and Jacob, both former slaves--along with a cohort of sixty-some Africans and Arabs--carry a dead
muzungu (white person) for nine months across impossible 19th-century African terrain. While they ultimately reach their destination, delivering a wizened body to the awaiting arms of their future colonizers, the greater catastrophe is still to come. Petina Gappah knows what she writes; her historical and cultural insights add texture and veracity to every page. A powerful novel, beautifully told,
Out of Darkness, Shining Light reveals as much about the present circumstances as the past that helped create them."
--Jesmyn Ward, author of Sing, Unburied, Sing "Mixing painstaking research with a formidable imagination, Petina Gappah resurrects the brave, misguided, heroic, and ill-starred party who hauled the dried-up corpse of Dr. David Livingstone across 1,000 miles of African interior to the Indian Ocean. Her narrators, a hilarious cook named Halima and a sanctimonious Christian named Jacob, cut a swath through a continent at the crossroads of colonization, superstition, religion and slavery, illuminating the contradictions inherent in every life. This is a beautiful novel."
--Anthony Doerr, author of All the Light We Cannot See "A sweeping epic that is also startlingly intimate,
Out of Darkness, Shining Light is a revelation. In luminous prose, Petina Gappah gives voice to people silenced by history, allowing them the full scope of their humanity, from petty gossip to self-righteous evangelism to romantic longings and dreams for the future. She grapples with what it means to explore other cultures, to seek answers to the questions 'what if?' and 'what else?' In doing so, she holds a funhouse mirror up to colonialist narratives like
Heart of Darkness, revealing their distortions."
--Christina Baker Kline, author of Orphan TrainA Lit Hub, Millions, and Buzzfeed Most Anticipated Book "David Livingstone, the 19th-century Scottish missionary who set out to find the source of the Nile, casts a long shadow over East Africa, and Gappah explores his legacy in her new novel. Narrated by Halima, Livingstone's cook and slave, and Jacob, a pious freed slave, as Livingstone's corpse is taken to the coast of Africa, the story offers a fresh look at the enduring history of colonialism."
--The New York Times, 17 New Books to Watch For in September "Perhaps no story was as ripe for the
Wide Sargasso Sea treatment (the revision of a classic by marginalized voices) as the tale of missionary David Livingstone's death in Africa. In contrasting styles, the Zimbabwean novelist lets two characters describe their trek across Africa with Livingstone's body, beautifully complicating the narrative."
--New York Magazine, Best and Biggest Books to Read This Fall "A rich, vivid, and addictive book filled with memorably drawn characters. This is a humane, riveting, epic novel that spotlights marginalized historical voices."
--Kirkus, starred "Gappah decolonizes the legend of Dr. Livingstone by turning the tale inside out, giving voice to those who are overlooked in the official narratives. The result is an indictment of the legacy of slavery and colonialism that is also an engrossing adventure story."
--Library Journal, starred "Riveting ... a deeply layered exploration of courage, sorrow, and resilience, culminating in a revelatory quest and an entracing vision."
--Booklist "Readers who enjoy expedition travelogues or smartly drawn characters will appreciate Gappah's winning novel."
--Publishers Weekly
Petina Gappah is an award-winning and widely translated Zimbabwean writer. She is the author of two novels, Out of Darkness, Shining Light, The Book of Memory, and two short story collections, Rotten Row and An Elegy for Easterly. Her work has also been published in, among others, The New Yorker, Der Spiegel, The Financial Times, and the Africa Report. For many years, Petina worked as an international trade lawyer at the highest levels of diplomacy in Geneva where she advised more than seventy developing countries from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America on trade law and policy. Petina has also been a DAAD Writing Fellow in Berlin, an Open Society Fellow and a Livingstone Scholar at Cambridge University. She has law degrees from Cambridge, Graz University in Austria, and the University of Zimbabwe. She currently lives in Harare.