And After Many Days by Jowhor Ile appears at first to be a
book about a son who goes missing. Told from the perspective of the younger
son, Ajie, the book opens with a description of the Utu family on the day that
Paul, the older son, leaves the house to visit a neighbor and never comes home.
But it soon becomes obvious that this book is not primarily about the family’s search for
the missing son, or even about how they are affected by his loss. It is simply
about a family, and Paul’s disappearance serves merely as a turning point
between “Then” and “Now”, as we go look back into the past and explore the
family relationships prior to the disappearance and then continue on afterwards
as the family carries on without Paul.
Set against a backdrop of war-torn Nigeria in the 1990s, the
contrast between the culture and the political unrest of the period, which is
so completely foreign to most North American and European readers, and the
typical issues of the family, which are so familiar, is what is most striking.
Paul, Ajie, and their sister Bibi experience typical sibling squabbles, vying
for their parents’ attention and affection, developing their own identities as
they grow up, struggling with school and friendships and figuring out their own
futures. We can all identify with Ajie’s frustration at being blamed for fights
he didn’t start, the children’s admiration of their father, the youngsters’
excitement at their first taste of independence as they leave home to attend
boarding school. These feelings are universal. It is easy to forget the
different world that this family lives in until outside events break in: students
are killed by corrupt police; Ma tells the children the story of how their father’s
mother gave birth to two sets of twins, who were all drowned and the second set
blinded, to prevent them “from seeing their way back to this same family to
cause sorrow”; a group of activists are hanged after a mockery of a trial. These
events are shocking to most readers. Life is cheap in this world, and it must
go on even when a son goes missing.
Ile creates a beautiful picture of this family, deftly
bringing in stories of the parents’ pasts and experiences of neighbors and
friends to create a clear picture of the world that has formed these
individuals into the family they have become. Much like Ajie, we become so
wrapped up in the lives of those who are left that we temporarily forget about
Paul, and then feel guilty when we remember. At the end of the book, when we
finally learn Paul’s fate, it is, in some ways, merely another moment in the
life of these people, no more or less important than any other. It is something
that must be accepted, because it has happened and cannot be changed. But it
highlights the fact that Ajie’s life went on without his brother. He followed
his own path, becoming an adult in this unpredictable world in which men are
executed without a trial and brothers disappear without much of a police
inquiry.
Ile sums up the point of this book in Ajie’s thoughts as he
looks at the manuscript of a book his mother has written on native plants:
“Even if they become extinct,” he thinks, “at least a memory of them has been
preserved and can be called to life any day.” Ajie’s memories of his family,
both before and after Paul’s disappearance, keep Paul alive and through them,
Paul continues to be a part of the family. Memories, whether those of Ajie’s
parents or his own, are a powerful tool that keeps his family together and
carries on their history into the next generation.
I received this book from Blogging for Books for this review. For additional information on this book, please see the Penguin Random House webpage.