Irenosen Okojie Curandera review

Irenosen Okojie Curandera review

Curandera

  • Auteur: Irenosen Okojie (Engeland)
  • Soort boek: roman
  • Taal: Engels
  • Uitgever: Soft Skull Press
  • Verschijnt: 8 juli 2025
  • Omvang: 320 pagina’s
  • Uitgave: gebonden boek / ebook
  • Prijs: $ 27,00
  • Boek bestellen bij: Amazon / Bol / Libris

Irenosen Okojie Curandera review en recensie

  • “Okojie’s language is worth savouring—lush with imagery, symbolism, and sensory detail … A novel that smiles kindly on those patient readers who take the time to learn its rhythm and wrestle with its deeper truths.” (Ian Mond, Locus)
  • “A striking tale of supernatural haunting, healing, and revenge … Exquisite and esoteric.” (Kirkus Reviews)

Flaptekst van de roman van Irenosen Okojie

Set between seventeenth-century Cape Verde and contemporary London, Curandera is a kaleidoscopic story of rebirth and redemption, and a mythic tale of metamorphic recalibrations across time.

In Gethsemane, Cape Verde, the appearance of a mysterious new arrival, Zulmira, coincides with a series of strange events. Zulmira is a shamanic disciple of Oni, an omnipotent and loving yet vengeful deity.

In contemporary London, botanist Therese lives with Haitian musician Azacca, Peruvian drifter Emilien, and daring Finn. These four kindred spirits, bound together by their shared descent from Oni, travel to another realm to complete a secret, sacred task at Oni’s behest. But a disruptive object returns with them from the other plane: a bleeding ribcage, flowering with intoxicating fruit.

As Zulmira grows close to a fisherman, Domingos, and his wife and daughter, the increasingly disturbing occurrences in Gethsemane disrupt forms, time, and place. In London, Therese and her housemates, growing ever more powerful on the otherworldly fruit, discover the disturbing costs of their service to Oni. As the stage is set for the collision of two dimensions, the esoteric workings of shamanism intersect with powerful forces of friendship, love, and jealousy.

Irenosen Okojie is a Nigerian born British author. Her first novel, Butterfly Fish, and short story collections, Speak Gigantular   and Nudibranch, have won and been nominated for multiple awards. Her journalism has been featured in The New York TimesThe ObserverThe Guardian, and HuffPost. Vice chair of the Royal Society of Literature, she was awarded an MBE for Services to Literature in 2021. She is the director and founder of the Black to the Future festival.

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