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Authors: Taiye Selasi

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Ghana Must Go

BOOK: Ghana Must Go
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THE PENGUIN PRESS

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

USA

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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices:

80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

For more information about the Penguin Group visit penguin.com

 

First published in 2013 by The Penguin Press,

a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

 

Copyright © Taiye Selasi, 2013

All rights reserved

 

No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

 

Excerpt from “Approximations.” Copyright © 1962, 1966 by Robert Hayden. From
Collected Poems of Robert Hayden
by Robert Hayden, edited by Frederick Glaysher. Used by permission of Liveright Publishing Corporation.

 

“a word forgot to remember what to forget . . .” by Renee C. Neblett.

Used by permission of the author.

 

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA

Selasi, Taiye.

Ghana must go / Taiye Selasi.

p. cm.

ISBN 978-1-101-60577-6

1. Families—Ghana—Fiction. I. Title.

PS3619.E456G43 2013

813'.6—dc23

2012039674

 

Publisher’s Note

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

for Juliette Modupe Tuakli, M.D.

Contents

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Epigraph

Pronunciations

Family Tree

Part I: GONE

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

9.

10.

11.

12.

13.

Part II: GOING

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

8.

Part III: GO

1.

2.

3.

4.

5.

6.

7.

Acknowledgments

 

   Not sunflowers, not

roses, but rocks in patterned

   sand grow here. And bloom.


ROBERT HAYDEN
, “Approximations”

A word forgot to remember

what to forget

and every so often

let the truth slip


RENEE C. NEBLETT
, “Snapshots”

Pronunciations

 

P
RONUNCIATION

M
EANING

O
RIGIN

ACCRA

ah
krah

(as in afar)

Capital city of Ghana

Ghana

BABAFEMI

bah bah
feh
mee

(as in absolutely)

“Loved by his father”

Nigeria

EKUA

eh
kwee
ah

(as in Evita)

Girl born on Wednesday

Ghana

FEMI

feh
mee

(as in Emmy)

Short form of Babafemi

Nigeria

FOLA

fo
lah

(as in cola)

Short form of Folasadé

Nigeria

FOLASADÉ

fo lah
shah
deh

(as in absolutely)

“Wealth confers my crown”

Nigeria

IDOWU

ee
do woo

(as in peekaboo)

Born after twins

Nigeria

KEHINDE

ky
in deh

(as in yesterday)

Second-born twin

Nigeria

KOKROBITÉ

ko kro
bee
teh

(as in absolutely)

Coastal town near Accra

Ghana

KWEKU

kway
koo

(as in Quaker)

Boy born on Wednesday

Ghana

LAGOS

lay
goss

(as in famous)

Largest city in Nigeria

Nigeria

NIKÉ

nee
keh

(as in ginseng)

Short form of Adeniké

Nigeria

OLUKAYODÉ

o loo
ky
o deh

(as in only Saturday)

“God brings happiness”

Nigeria

PHILAE

fy
lee

(as in highly)

Southern limits of Egypt

Greece

SADÉ

shah
deh

(as in André)

Short form of Folasadé

Nigeria

SAI

sy

(as in sigh)

Surname

Ghana

SENA

seh
nah

(as in henna)

“Gift from God”

Ghana

SOMAYINA

so mah
yee
nah

(as in Serafina)

“May I not travel alone”

Nigeria

TAIWO

ty
wo

(as in Cairo)

First-born twin

Nigeria

FAMILY TREE

Part I

GONE

1.

Kweku dies barefoot on a Sunday before sunrise, his slippers by the doorway to the bedroom like dogs. At the moment he is on the threshold between sunroom and garden considering whether to go back to get them. He won’t. His second wife Ama is asleep in that bedroom, her lips parted loosely, her brow lightly furrowed, her cheek hotly seeking some cool patch of pillow, and he doesn’t want to wake her.

He couldn’t if he tried.

She sleeps like a cocoyam. A thing without senses. She sleeps like his mother, unplugged from the world. Their house could be robbed—by Nigerians in flip-flops rolling right up to their door in rusting Russian Army tanks, eschewing subtlety entirely as they’ve taken to doing on Victoria Island (or so he hears from his friends: the crude oil kings and cowboys demobbed to Greater Lagos, that odd breed of African: fearless and rich)—and she’d go on snoring sweetly, a kind of musical arrangement, dreaming sugarplums and Tchaikovsky.

She sleeps like a child.

But he’s carried the thought anyway, from bedroom to sunroom, making a production of being careful. A show for himself. He does this, has always done this since leaving the village, little open-air performances for an audience of one. Or for two: him and his cameraman, that silent-invisible cameraman who stole away beside him all those decades ago in the darkness before daybreak with the ocean beside, and who has followed him every day everywhere since. Quietly filming his life. Or: the life of the Man Who He Wishes to Be and Who He Left to Become.

In this scene, a bedroom scene: The Considerate Husband.

Who doesn’t make a peep as he slips from the bed, moving the covers aside noiselessly, setting each foot down separately, taking pains not to wake his unwakable wife, not to get up too quickly thus unsettling the mattress, crossing the room very quietly, closing the door without sound. And down the hall in this manner, through the door into the courtyard where she clearly can’t hear him, but still on his toes. Across the short heated walkway, from Master Wing to Living Wing, where he pauses for a moment to admire his house.

•   •   •

It’s a brilliant arrangement this one-story compound, by no means novel, but functional, and elegantly planned: simple courtyard in the middle with a door at each corner to the Living, Dining, Master, and (Guest) Bedroom Wings. He sketched it on a napkin in a hospital cafeteria in his third year of residency, at thirty-one years old. At forty-eight bought the plot off a Neapolitan patient, a rich land speculator with Mafia ties and Type II diabetes who moved to Accra because it reminds him of Naples in the fifties, he says (the wealth pressed against want, fresh sea air against sewage, filthy poor against filthier rich at the beach). At forty-nine found a carpenter who was willing to build it, the only Ghanaian who didn’t balk at putting a hole in a house. The carpenter was seventy with cataracts and a six-pack. He finished in two years working impeccably and alone.

At fifty-one moved his things in, but found it too quiet.

At fifty-three took a second wife.

Elegantly planned.

Now he stops at the top of the square, between doorways, where the blueprint is obvious, where he can
see
the design, and considers it as the painter must consider the painting or the mother the newborn: with confusion and awe, that this thing which sprang to life there inside
the mind or body has made it here to the outside, a life of its own. Slightly baffled. How did it get here, from
in
him to in front? (Of course he knows: with the proper application of the appropriate instruments; it’s the same for the painter, the mother, the amateur architect—but still it’s a wonder to look at.)

His house.

His beautiful, functional, elegant house, which appeared to him whole, the whole ethos, in an instant, like a fertilized zygote spinning inexplicably out of darkness in possession of an entire genetic code. An entire logic. The four quadrants: a nod to symmetry, to his training days, to graph paper, to the compass, perpetual journey/perpetual return, etc., etc., a gray courtyard, not green, polished rock, slabs of slate, treated concrete, a kind of rebuttal to the tropics, to home: so a homeland re-imagined, all the lines clean and straight, nothing lush, soft, or verdant. In one instant. All there. Now here. Decades later on a street in Old Adabraka, a crumbling suburb of colonial mansions, whitewashed stucco, stray dogs. It is the most beautiful thing he has ever created—

except Taiwo,
he thinks suddenly, a shock of a thought. Whereon Taiwo herself—with black thicket for eyelash and carved rock for cheekbone and gemstone for eyes, her pink lips the same color as the inside of conch shells, impossibly beautiful, an impossible girl—sort of appears there in front of him interrupting his performance of The Considerate Husband, then goes up in smoke. It is the most beautiful thing he has ever created
alone
, he amends the observation.

•   •   •

Then continues along the walkway through the door into the Living Wing, through the dining room, to the sunroom, to the threshold.

Where he stops.

BOOK: Ghana Must Go
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