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Book Review -Tales From Different Tails

Mon, 28 Nov 2011 Source: Damoah, Nana Awere

Title: Tales From Different Tails

Author: Nana Awere Damoah

Pages: 145

Available: All leading bookshops

Review by: Dr Frankie Asare-Donkoh

The rhyming title of this book does not disappoint the reader as the book has a long

tail of tales that keeps the reader in different moods – sadness, laughter,

confusion and in suspense. As a young man growing up in a rural community, books by

great authors like Ama Atta Aidoo, Chinua Achibe, Atukwei Okai, Ayikwei Armah and

others were my immediate companions as they led me to understand the use of

language, especially spicing sentences with African proverbs.

Then there was the famous Baffour column in the then Weekly Spectator (now The

Spectator) written by my very senior colleague, the witty and humorous writer,

Willie Donkor, who enlivened my interest in reading.

With the Ama Aidoos, the Atukwei Okais and Chinua Achibes gradually fading away

through natural progression of humans, one wonders in whose hands they are leaving

readers of African-centred and authored novels. However, with young authors like

Nana Awere Damoah emerging unto the scene carrying the trademarks of our revered and

cherished authors named above, one is confident that the African story-telling

tradition is being sustained.

Usually, one would not expect chemical engineers to have much interest in novel

writing, to an extent of coming out with world-class novels. But Awere Damoah, a

Chemical Engineer with a Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Chemical Engineering

from Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) and the University

of Nottingham, UK, proves such views wrong with his own style of exciting, inciting

and invigorating story- telling in the traditional African way.

Author of two previous books, Excursions in My Mind(2008) andThrough the Gates of

Thought (2010), Awere Damoah indeed shows that he indeed has a long tail of tales to

share with his readers. His third and current book, Tales from Different tails,

takes readers through some of the everyday life situations most people go through in

Ghana and other parts of Africa.

The book’s opening chapter, ‘October Rush’ set at the campus of the KNUST, Kumasi,

brings long-held memories by many who were privileged to be boarding students in

secondary schools and tertiary institutions. It’s a mixture of religiosity and

secularity, a situation very common in most university and college campuses where

the most religious and non-adherents struggle to win each other over. It’s also

about a love encounter between people who in their inner parts had fallen for one

another of the opposite sex but cannot show their true inner feelings because they

operate behind the curtains of the Scriptures Union (SU), which sometimes bluntly

considers even the mere talk about ‘love and romance’ as sin.

‘October Rush’ thus keeps the reader captivated right from the beginning to the end

and would not make one put the book down. Perhaps, what might intrigue a lot of

readers of this book who know the religious background of Nana Awere Damoah, and his

deep involvement in the SU, is how he classically categorises the girls on campus

into ‘New Stock’ (freshers), ‘Reduced to Clear’ (sophomores), and ‘Buy One, Get One

Free’ (final years), indicating how ‘fresh’ or ‘expired’ a girl could be depending

on the length of her ‘operations’ on campus. The suspense in this opening chapter is

superb.

The other chapters of the book are cleverly shared to cover different life

experiences which many of us go through. They range from pure and unadulterated love

to unbelievable betrayal of friendship and loyalty. ‘Truth Floats’, ‘Dribble

Zagidibodidi’ and ‘Hope Undeferred’ (Chapters 2, 3 and 4) clearly display different

levels of love, loyalty and jealousy and how sometimes jealousy could drive some

people to send their friends to jail in order to have their girlfriends, wives,

husbands, properties and positions in life. The happy endings of some of these

stories, particularly that of chapter three, brings out Awere Damoah’s story-telling

skills.

Chapters 5 and 6, provide a lot of lessons for many a young man and woman embarking

on life’s journey. Kojo Nkrabeah’s move from the village to the city to take his

share of the flowing gold and wealth on the streets provides a good warning to those

who are easily swayed by the sudden transformation of their friends’ poor lives

without pondering over the source of their wealth. ‘Guardian of the Rented Well’

(chapter 6) is about how both men and women would trade sex to achieve their goals,

and how they are eventually shamed and punished.

The ‘Trotro Palaver’ (chapter 7) captures the usual scenes within trotros (most

popular transport in Ghana) and taxis where debates, gossips and all sorts of

discussions take place, sometimes leading to some passengers engaging themselves in

hot exchanges in favour of their preferred political parties and leaders. The

chapter also reveals the behaviours of some drivers and their mates (aplanke) and

how they treat passengers.

The other fascination about this book is how Nana Awere Damoah establishes himself

as a good African story-teller by interspersing his narrations with proverbs,

bringing my memories of Baffour and his usual antics with his numerous friends at

their palm wine bars. “…the offspring of the long snake could not be short” is how

Awere Damoah rebrands the old Ghanaian proverb of “Okoto nwo anoma” (a crab can’t

give birth to a bird) on page 52 of the book.

In order not to let you drink your soup before the fufu is brought, all I can do is

to leave you, dear reader, to enjoy the re-birth of African story-telling by going

for a copy of this fascinating and easy to read book which is on sale at all leading

bookshops in Ghana and also on Amazon and other internet bookshops.

About the Reviewer

Dr. Frankie Asare-Donkoh is a Media and Governance Consultant, and Lecturer in

Political Science at the Department of History and Political Studies of the Faculty

of Social Sciences, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi,

Ghana. Dr Asare-Donkoh has been a journalist, columnist and newspaper editor for

over 15 years, publishing over 400 newspaper articles since he began. In 1995, he

won the Best News Reporter award in Ghana. Frankie was the acting General Secretary

and Deputy General Secretary of Ghana Journalists Association for four years.

Footnote: Tales from Different Tails will be launched on 1 December 2011 at the

Teachers' Hall Complex, Adabraka, Accra at 6pm.

Columnist: Damoah, Nana Awere