Theft by Abdulrazak Gurnah audiobook review – coming-of-age saga in Tanzania
        <p>Three young people step boldly into their adult lives in this elegantly narrated novel from the Nobel laureate</p><p>The <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/dec/08/nobel-winner-abdulrazak-gurnah-says-writing-cannot-be-just-about-polemics">Nobel prize-winning</a> author Abdulrazak Gurnah is known for his portrayals of east Africans and the after-effects of colonial rule. Opening in Zanzibar in the aftermath of independence, his 11th novel, Theft, spans half a century as it documents the lives of Karim, Fauzia and Badar. We learn how young Karim is treated as “an afterthought” by his mother, Raya, who divorces her much older husband and leaves her son behind to start a new life.</p><p>Mother and son are reunited several years later in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where Raya has married a pharmacist named Haji. Karim, who grows up to be handsome, intelligent and more than a little conceited, gets a scholarship to study in the city and meets Fauzia, who is training to be a teacher and is keen to avoid the fate of other “mute daughter[s] laid out for deflowering”. She and Karim marry, and the pair open their home to Badar, a former servant of Raya and Haji’s who was abandoned by his parents as a child.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/oct/30/theft-by-abdulrazak-gurnah-audiobook-review-coming-of-age-saga-in-tanzania">Continue reading...</a>      
      
      
        
          
          Read original
        
        
          The Guardian        
        
      
    