The Last of the African Kings follows the wayward fortunes of a noble African family.
Hewitt is a professor of French at Am.
Leah D.
He has published translations of six of Conde\'s novels, including, most recently, Crossing the Mangrove.
Richard Philcox is one of the leading translators of Third-World Francophone literature in the world today.
Her other writings include the novels I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem, Tree of Life, and Crossing the Mangrove.
She first won international acclaim for Children of Segu, a novel about Black African experience and the slave trade.
Hewitt is a professor of French at Amherst College and the author of Autobiographical Tightropes: Simone de Beauvoir, Nathalie Sarraute, Marguerite Duras, Monique Wittig, and Maryse Conde (Nebraska 1990).
About the Author: Born in Guadeloupe in 1937, Maryse Conde has lived in Africa and a traveled throughout the world.
Leah D.
He has published translations of six of Conde\'s novels, including, most recently, Crossing the Mangrove.
Richard Philcox is one of the leading translators of Third-World Francophone literature in the world today.
Her other writings include the novels I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem, Tree of Life, and Crossing the Mangrove.
She first won international acclaim for Children of Segu, a novel about Black African experience and the slave trade.
Born in Guadeloupe in 1937, Maryse Conde has lived in Africa and a traveled throughout the world.
It is set mainly in the Americas, from the Caribbean to modern-day South Carolina, yet Africa hovers always in the background.
A book made up of many characters and countless stories, The Last of the African Kings skillfully intertwines the themes of exile, lost origins, memory, and hope.
In the course of this brilliant novel, Maryse Conde tells of Behanzin\'s scattered offspring and their lives in the Caribbean and the United States.
It begins with the regal Behanzin, an African king who opposed French colonialism and was exiled to distant Martinique.
The Last of the African Kings follows the wayward fortunes of a noble African family