Guest Review: Mistress of the Game by Asabea Ashun

(Celestine Nudanu left this comment on the Ghanaian Literature Week post.  It deserves its own post.  Celestine lives in Accra and works at IPS.  She is an avid reader and an old friend)

Kinna, I would very much like to reivew Asabea Ashun’s Mistress of the Game for the Ghana Literature Week. I hope ny little submission is not too late. Asabea Ashun is a Ghanaian professor of Chemistry who lives and teaches in Canada. Mistress of the Game is her first novel. It is about marriage of two cultures, African and Western that went wrong in the end becasue of betrayal of trust . It is also about the politics of new found oil in Ghana and the greed and dirty dealings that go with it. Mistress of the Game is also about courage, hope and survival in the face of despair and the shattering realisation of living with HIV/AIDS.

The intrigue in the novel is hightened when Sarah, the Ghanaian young woman married to a Canadian, Philip, connives with her pushy and overbearing mother (who incidentally means well) to deceive Philip in the most bizarre and unscrupulous manner ever imagined; juxtaposed with this couple are Jason, Philip’s younger brother and Araba, a young Ghanaian girl who discovers that one of the ways to survive in a dying metropolis that now threatens to come alive through the oil boom and the influx of expatriates, technocrats and crooks alike all wanting to cash in on the ‘liquid gold’, is to make good use of her asset. Ironically, it is Araba who with her two fatherless children of mixed race, give us hope at the end of the story.

The language is rich with humour, laced with Ghanaian English and Akan akin to Ayikwei Parkes’ Tail of the Blue Bird. The main settings for the plot are Takoradi, in Ghana, and Canada. The writer expounds well researched history and facts that gives credence to her academic background. The descriptions of scenes and planes are so vivid that the reader keeps ohing and ahing in recognition of familiar sights and landmarks. The Ghanaian characters are real, with everyday expressions and attiitudes that spell out the ingredients that make the Ghanain that happy go lucky human being, easily able to shrug off problems with that matter of fact approach to life, albeit full of humour.

I would not review further because I do not have a blog site and I don’t know if reviewing in this column is allowed by the rules. Mistress of the Game is available at Amazon and Shelfari. For those in Ghana, it can be purchased at Silverbird. Do get one and add to it your reading shelf/list.

8 comments

  1. Glad to hear you were such a fan of this book! Great to see it getting some more reviews as Dr. Ashun is fantastic. Personally I wasn’t a huge fan of the way the history was written in. I know more people seem to love that though and I am usually the exception 🙂

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    • Good, Eva. I know that your wishlist is one of the longest in the blogosphere. The amazing things is you do endeavour to read all the books. Thanks for your support.

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  2. Kinna, thanks so much for making this a Guest Review and for the good word about me. LOL! I’ve been around, not gone anywhere, following with keen interest the Ghana Literature Week.

    I do agree that next year, it should be a whole month.

    Congatulations for a good work done. You inspire me so much, you know. May God bless you for reaching out to so many of us out there.

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  3. Celestine, thank you for this review. You don’t need a blog site and your review/comment is more than adequate. I was wondering where you had disappeared to :). Thank you for participating.

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