Nature's way - A gripping, semi-historical imagining of the memories and experiences of a French botanist in colonial Africa
The Guardian Weekly|November 03, 2023
Readers of David Diop's previous novel, which won the International Booker prize, probably won't have forgotten the experience. At Night All Blood Is Black is narrated by a young Senegalese soldier recruited to fight for France in the first world war and brutalised in the trenches.
Alexandra Harris
Nature's way - A gripping, semi-historical imagining of the memories and experiences of a French botanist in colonial Africa

Now Diop has brought his capacious mind to bear on an earlier period of encounter between Europe and Africa. Beyond the Door of No Return is the story of a French Enlightenment botanist who travels to Senegal to study plants and finds himself overwhelmed by love for an African woman.

Michel Adanson is an old man by the time he writes this tale of passion in a leatherbound journal, hoping that his daughter will find it. Releasing emotions that have been guarded for 50 years, he goes back in memory to the hot night in 1752 when, in the village of Sor, he first heard about a woman who had been abducted and taken into slavery but, it was said, had somehow returned. Like a knight keen for a quest, but with the viable pretext of studying the plants en route, he sets out towards Cap-Vert to find her.

This story is from the November 03, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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This story is from the November 03, 2023 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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