| Summer 1989 |
|
|
| David Brookshaw |
Four Mozambican Writers |
2 |
| José Carlos Venâncio |
African Literature in Portuguese: From Cultural Dualism to the Defence of Utopia |
4 |
| Rosemary Billingham |
Pepetela: A Profile |
6 |
| Pepetela |
From O Cao e os Caluandas (Rosemary Billingham, trans) |
8 |
| Mia Couto |
Fiction: The Tale of the Two Who Returned from the Dead (David Brookshaw, trans) |
10 |
| Cy Grant |
Blackness and the Dreaming Soul: An Introduction to a Reading of Aimé Césaire’s Cahier d’un retour au pays natal |
12 |
| Beryl Gilroy |
The Woman Writer and Commitment: Links Between Caribbean and African Literature |
15 |
| Jean Arasanayagam |
From A Colonial Childhood 1 and other poems |
16 |
| Stephen Gray |
Poems: Migrant and Crossing the Desert |
18 |
| Alex Padamsee |
Poem: Stopped |
18 |
| Reviews |
|
|
| Nayantara Saghal |
The Satanic Verses by Salman Rushdie |
19 |
| Sauvir Khal |
A Turn in the South by V S Naipaul
V S Naipul: A Materialist Reading by Selwyn R Cudjoe |
21 |
| Mark Ralph-Bowman |
Matigari by Ngugi wa Thiong’o |
22 |
| Adewale Maja-Pearce |
Woman of the Aeroplanes by Kojo Laing |
23 |
| Maureen Alcorn |
Upon This Mountain by Timothy Wangusa |
23 |
| Pauline Dodgson |
An Anthology of East African Poetry
A D Amateshe, ed and A Selection of African Poetry
K E Senanu and T Vincent, eds |
25 |
| Denise deCaires Narain |
Mercy Ward by Ian McDonald and Heartease by Lorna Goodison |
26 |
| Books Received |
|
28 |
| Activities |
|
31 |
| Notes to Contributors |
|
31 |
| Susheila Nasta |
Editorial Note |
32 |