Tierno Monénembo

A winner of some of France’s most prestigious awards, including the Prix Renaudot and the Grand Prix de la francophonie, Guinean-born author Tierno Monénembo most recently received the 2022 Baobab Prize for Best African/Diasporic Work of Literature for his novel, The Lives and Deaths of Véronique Bangoura. A refugee from Guinean dictator Ahmed Sékou Touré’s regime, Monénembo migrated to France to earn a PhD in Biochemistry. He has lived in Senegal, Morocco, Algeria, the US, and now, a professor, in France. His 14-work oeuvre centers on an enduring, often scarred sense of home in exile.

Guinean novelist Tierno Monénembo transmits the authoritarian abuses of Ahmed Sékou Touré in this novel of a female survivor, the eponymous Véronique, living in exile. Her initial entreaty to Madame Corre, that she write her own story, soon gives way to a contextualization of Guinean atrocities in the broader context of a century of devastation and the attempts writers have made to chronicle that destruction. One meditation from this excerpt particularly sticks with me, a notion building from Kundera's line that “Memory doesn't film, it photographs.” The narrator explains that all days contain all others, and fixing on the photographs mistakes the process of history for a dismal moment.  

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