About the Author:
Margaret Laurence, best known for her five Manawaka novels, also published five African texts, as well as collections of essays, short stories, children's books and literary criticism.
Review:
"...well written, meticulously researched, and profusely illustrated." Ashley Thomson
"Anyone interested in writers as well as in writing should applaud the University of Alberta Press’s decision to bring out a new edition of Margaret Laurence’s Long Drums and Cannons: Nigerian Dramatists and Novelists, 1952-1966. While literary critics are thick on the ground, the chance to see one master novelist analyze the craft of other writers is rare. And the fact that this analysis took place over thirty years ago yet continues to reward readers gives Long Drums and Cannons historical as well as critical interest...Free from jargon, characterized by the habits of the time...enthusiastic, and attentive to the craft of writing, Laurence’s selections and her analyses have stood the test of time. The only thing she was totally wrong about was the irrelevance of her book." Research in African Literature
"There is certainly good scholarship in the critical edition that Stovel has put together: its updated biographies and bibliographies; its glossary; its inclusion of Laurence's formerly unpublished essay "Tribalism As Us Versus Them"..."Wendy Schissel
"The republication of Long Drums and Cannons: Nigerian Dramatists and Novelists 1952-1966 again makes available the first detailed analysis of Nigerian literature, and provides scholars with a well-annotated version of the last of the five books based on Laurence's experiences in Africa during the 1950's. Her study holds up remarkably well thirty-three years after its initial publication.... The 2001 edition of Long Drums and Cannons contains close to 150 pages of additional introductory and explanatory material, written by a number of different scholars under the able direction of editor Nora Foster Stovel.... [T]he book's updated biographical and bibliographical sections are invaluable for scholarly readers, as are the annotations, appendices, and commentaries that place Laurence's book into its historical context and compare it to the original typescript. Also fascinating are a paper on tribalism that Laurence delivered in 1969 and an essay by Abdul-Rasheed Na'Allah titled "Nigerian Literature Then and Now."" Wendy Roy, Canadian Literature
"Good books neither date nor die. The release of the second edition of Long Drums, her remarkable homage to Nigerian literature, is genuine cause for celebration.... Laurence did not need the stiff academicism of the ivory tower to draw attention to the vitalities of a young national literature; it is remarkable how refreshing the book remains for that reason in the new edition.... Her judgments are wise, sane, and happily shorn of the cluttered jargon of a modern literary criticism purporting to be a science." Canadian Journal of African Studies, August 2004
"In one respect it is a unique book. For where else in the field of post-colonial writing could one find an example of a writer from one region of the English-speaking world embarking on a major study of the literature of another?....It seems to me that the interest of Long Drums & Cannons is essentially two-fold: it offers a pioneering study of Nigerian writing - one of the first - over the period of its first flowering (1952-1966) and just before the tragedy of the Biafran War; it is an intelligent, sympathetic introduction for the reader who wishes to know who is important, or potentially so, and what to read." Geoffrey V. Davis, Margaret Laurence Review, Vol. 11
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