Francis B. Nyamnjoh's characters play out the story of a country in trouble.
Amin George Forji (Originally published in Ohmynews)
Get rich by fair or foul means. This may be the best way to sum up the challenging novel A Nose for Money (2006) by Cameroonian-born Francis B. Nyamnjoh.
Although set in a fictional African country called Mimboland (Cameroon creole word for Drunkland), a preview of the story line illustrates that it is aimed at depicting the canker worm of the corruption that is eating Cameroon.
The choice of the country's fictional name Mimboland itself demonstrates that because everyone is drunk, there is apparently no one who can rescue anyone else. For the blind cannot lead the blind, else both sink into a pit. The book is fascinating in terms of form and content, with the plot revolving around the semi literate Prospere (his name means prosperity in French) and his wives.
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