| Autumn 1985 |
|
| Prabhu Guptara |
Editorial: A Triumph to Have Happened at All |
3 |
| Joyce Johnson |
Bessie Head and the Oral Tradition: The Structure of Maru |
5 |
| Robert Fraser |
Kojo Laing: Profile and Extract From Search Sweet Country |
9 |
| Russell McDougall |
Okonkwo’s Walk: The Choreography of Things Fall Apart |
12 |
| Fiction |
|
|
| Veronique Tadjo |
The Magician and the Girl |
17 |
| Anya Asale |
Extract from Panman |
19 |
| Mike Phillips |
Short Story: The Smell of the Coast |
19 |
| Leslie Anthony Goffe |
Poem: Seamstress |
23 |
| Marsha Prescod |
Poem: May the Force be with You |
23 |
| David Dabydeen |
Poem: Ballad of the Little Black Boy |
24 |
| Fred D’Aguiar |
Black British and other poems |
25 |
| Alexander Baron |
Poem: Rebel |
26 |
| Reviews |
|
|
| Neville Grant |
AHandbook for Teaching African Literatureby Elizabeth Gunner |
27 |
| John Welch |
South Asian Poetry for the English Classroom |
29 |
| Lyn Innes |
A Sense of Place: Essays in Post-Colonial Literature Britta Olinder (ed) |
31 |
| Adetokunbo Pearse |
Call Me Woman by Ellen Kuzwayo |
33 |
| James Gibbs |
Blues for the Prodigal directed by Wole Soyinka |
34 |
| Books Received |
|
35 |
| Activities, Letters, Resources, Contributors |
|
36 |