Call and Response
By Gothataone Moeng
By Gothataone Moeng
By Gothataone Moeng
By Gothataone Moeng
By Gothataone Moeng
Read by Warona Setshwaelo
By Gothataone Moeng
Read by Warona Setshwaelo
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$18.00
Feb 06, 2024 | ISBN 9780593491003
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Feb 07, 2023 | ISBN 9780593490990
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Feb 07, 2023 | ISBN 9780593629024
571 Minutes
-
$18.00
Feb 06, 2024 | ISBN 9780593491003
-
Feb 07, 2023 | ISBN 9780593490990
-
Feb 07, 2023 | ISBN 9780593629024
571 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
Praise for Call and Response
âAll these stories reveal how women, family, and community intersectâeach written with compassion and a deft hand.â
âOprah Daily
âA good short story is a bit of alchemy, showing us so much in so few pages. Gothataone Moengâs debut collection does this over and over, each story surprising with its music, its warmth, its command of language. Moeng writes of contemporary Africa, and if the settings and customs feel unfamiliar to Western readers, thereâs something universal and true in these tales that grapple with family, faith, and how we make our way in the world.â
âRumaan Alam, New York Times bestselling author of Leave The World Behind
âCall and Response is a beautiful collection. What sharply observed vignettesâlinked by striking figures, vivid details, a wry and ruminative mood, and deep insight into the vicissitudes of family life. They reminded me sometimes of the work of Anton Chekhov, sometimes that of Bessie Head: calm, wise, yet searching, restless, like a still pond bestirred by undercurrents, or in Moengâs lambent words, âlike a torchlight helpless over the vast velvet of night.'â
âNamwali Serpell, author of The Old Drift
âThe debut of a major talent.â
âSouvankham Thammavongsa, author of How to Pronounce Knife
âThe publication of Call and Response is cause for celebration. Big-hearted and clear-eyed in their evocation of her beloved Botswana, these radiant stories contain the stuff of life: joys and sorrows, the wisdom of generations, the ceremonies of the everyday. A gorgeous, vital work of literature.â
âYoon Choi, author of Skinship
âItâs a terrific collection, deeply rooted in place, sharply observed, comic, fierce, with a fine sense of the tragedy and absurdity of life. I hope it attracts the wide readership it deserves.â
âMonica Ali, author of Brick Lane and Love Marriage
âCall and Response is a necessary exploration of womanhood in the context of the countervailing forces of traditional values and modern norms. Moengâs stories are rich, compassionate and compelling and sing about Botswanaâs women in lyrical, evocative prose. This collection was a joy to read.â
âCherie Jones, author of How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House
âIn Gothataone Moengâs precise, delightfully detailed collection, Call and Response: Stories, we witness the challenges women of all ages face in a modernizing postcolonial Botswana where elements from the old life still remainâŠThough the stories are unlinked, all of these women and their separate complexities feel intricately connectedâŠBolstered by her stirring prose, Moengâs stories pulsate with life and accumulate to build a full, rich world.â
âThe New York Times
âIn a debut collection set in Botswana, a young widow, reluctant to discard her mourning clothes, expresses wonder at the outside world that continues despite her husbandâs death a year prior. In another, a university student discovers her brotherâs affair, shattering her perception of him and their adopted city. But all these stories reveal how women, family, and community intersectâeach written with compassion and a deft hand.â
âOprah Daily
âA lovely debut brimming with deeply felt and well-rounded stories.â
â Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
âBotswanan writer Moengâs lyrical and poignant debut delves into complex family dynamics⊠[Moeng] brings insightful prose and a distinctive voice to these layered stories, demonstrating deep knowledge of her characters and care for their worlds. Moeng is a new force in the literary landscape.â
âPublishers Weekly (starred review)
âMoeng paints beautiful vignettes of modern Botswana, exposing readers to communities and traditions of her home country while exploring dichotomies and relational tensions familiar to all readers. Her beautiful, lyrical prose and memorable characters make this collection a delight to read.â
âBooklist
â[Moeng] writes with lush, heartfelt intensity that illuminates contemporary Botswana for readers who value complex female characters navigating a rapidly changing world.â
âLibrary Journal
âThese brilliant stories are set in modern Botswana, but delve into age-old longings.
Moeng unfurls the luminous inner life of her characters (girls and women for the most part) as they go about their ordinary days, hearts and heads brimful of new wants and desires, but keenly aware of old traditions and family expectations.â
âDaily Mail
âIn Moengâs nine stories, so exceptionally written that sentences can shine and awe, the push-pull of the modern and traditional is a recurring theme, and her characters, mostly younger women, are caught in that psychologically turbulent, unforgiving space, their private and public lives splintered and feelings left rawâŠmasterful.â
âStar Tribune
âThereâs something about the short story form that welcomes a celebration of mundanity and the everyday. These stories, set in Botswana, follow characters going about their lives: they fall in and out of love, navigate hookups, get into arguments with their spouses, and ponder how to take care of aging family members. The collection as a whole is quiet and deeply steeped in place. Most of the stories arenât centered on major life-changing events, but instead illuminate the ins and outs of daily life.â
âBook Riot
âThese nine unhurried, fully realized tales may brim with their protagonistsâ yearnings, familial rivalries, regrets and disappointments, but reading them is pure pleasure⊠Completely unforced and fascinating. Rich, thronging with life, Call and Response is a collection to be treasured.â
âNew Internationalist
âAlthough Moeng is young, her prose is mature â spare and subtle, with both universal and local appeal. Beautifully crafted, they somehow echo US author Elizabeth Stroutâs stories. They pull the reader, seemingly effortlessly, into the intimacy of a character, focusing on details and everyday life which open onto wider issues.â
âThe Africa Report
âThese mouth-wateringly sensory, satisfyingly complex stories, set in rural and urban BotswanaâŠ. Not the glance or sharp epiphany in these stories but the long kiss, with the heart as totem, questions in their wake.â
âIrish Times