We, the Kindling by Otoniya J. Okot Bitek
Canadian | CBC Books | Posted: February 12, 2025 9:08 PM | Last Updated: February 12
A novel exploring survival, memory, and the aftermath of war in northern Uganda
As this spare and luminous novel begins, we meet Miriam, Helen and Maggie — three friends who, years ago when they were school children, survived capture by the Lord's Resistance Army in northern Uganda. Now, as the women go about their new lives in the city, shopping, caring for their children, planning and thinking about what the future might hold, we come to understand how deeply their past haunts the present.
In graceful yet unflinching prose, Otoniya Okot Bitek weaves vivid folk tales with taut realism, revealing flashes of life before the war that ravaged Uganda, unspooling the terrible events that led to abductions of children from supposedly safe schools, and tracing perilous journeys home again. Facing endless treks across the ravaged countryside and through narrow mountain passes, gun battles and constant brutality, many girls did not survive. Those who did make it back home, some carrying small children of their own, bore the unspoken weight of their experiences within families and communities that often wished to forget and move on.
In We, the Kindling, Okot Bitek insistently refuses to turn away or to spectacularize tragedy, shaping a chorus of women's voices into a hauntingly beautiful novel, suffused with care and humanity.
(From Knopf Canada)
We, the Kindling is available in February 2025.
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Otoniya J. Okot Bitek, a poet and scholar born in Kenya to Ugandan parents, currently lives in Kingston, Ont. Her first collection of poetry, 100 Days won the 2017 IndieFab Book of the Year Award for poetry and the 2017 Glenna Lushei Prize for African Poetry. Her second poetry collection, A is for Acholi, won the 2023 Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize, and her latest collection is Song & Dread. She was also longlisted for the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize. We, the Kindling is her debut novel.