Chenjerai Hove was regarded as one of Zimbabwe’s most prominent writers by the time of his death in July, 2015. He gave up the ghost in Norway at the age of 59.
Mr Hove was known as a critic of
President Robert Mugabe and went into self-imposed exile in 2001 after
harassment from the authorities.
He won several awards for his work
and was regarded as a leading figure in post-colonial literature in Zimbabwe. Mr
Hove was a novelist, poet and playwright.
Bones, published
in 1988, is among his best-known works. Set after independence on a white-owned
farm, the book asks what difference the end of colonial rule in 1980 really
made.
Film-maker Farai Sevenzo, said in
the wake of his death: “Chenjerai Hove was one of the most incredible writing
talents I have ever met, very much in the tradition of Kenyan writer Ngugi wa
Thiong'o
He had a brilliant command of the
English language, only bettered by his brilliant mastery of his own language,
Shona.
His tiny novel Bones is full of
incredible allegories and imagery that could only come from the Shona oral
tradition.
After Zimbabwean independence in
1980 - when it was possible to bump into writers like Charles Mungoshi,
Dambudzo Marechera and Chenjerai Hove all in the same space - he was one of the
leading figures of African literature who mentored new talent. I will miss him
enormously.
It is such a shame his exile makes
us question the direction that Zimbabwe has taken in relation to its great
artists.
Mr Hove was a "great writer,
novelist, poet and playwright", Mr Lunde said, "but first and
foremost he was a freedom fighter, fighting for human rights in his
country".
Mr Hove had stated during his
lifetime that it was his responsibility as "a citizen, as an African, as a
Zimbabwean... to look at our lives and at whether our leaders are enhancing our
dignity or taking it away".
He wrote four novels including Masimba Avanhu (Is This the People's
Power?), which looked at the situation of women in Zimbabwe, and it was that,
along with his political criticism, which got him noticed by the authorities,
the International Writers Project at Brown University, said.
From exile he wrote many poems,
which often dwelt on the theme of separation - and contributed a play and
proverbs to the BBC.
Among the awards Mr Hove won were
the Zimbabwe Writing Award in 1987, the Noma Award for Publishing in Africa in
1989 and a German-Africa Award for freedom of expression in 2001.
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