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Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Review: BROKEN PLACES & OUTER SPACES by Nnedi Okorafor

 

Broken Places & Outer Spaces (TED 2)Broken Places & Outer Spaces by Nnedi Okorafor
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Nnedi Okorafor was never supposed to be paralyzed. A college track star and budding entomologist, Nnedi’s lifelong battle with scoliosis was just a bump in her plan - something a simple surgery would easily correct.

But when Nnedi wakes from the surgery to find she can’t move her legs, her entire sense of who she is begins to waver. Confined to a hospital bed for months, unusual things begin to happen. Psychedelic bugs crawl her hospital walls; strange dreams visit her nightly. She begins to feel as if she’s turning into a cyborg. Unsure if she’ll ever walk again, Nnedi begins to put these experiences into writing, conjuring up strange, fantastical stories.
What Nnedi discovers during her confinement would prove to be the key to her life as a successful science fiction writer: In science fiction, when something breaks, something greater often emerges from the cracks. While she may be bedridden, instead of stopping her journey Nnedi’s paralysis opens up new windows in her mind, kindles her creativity and ultimately leads her to become more alive than she ever could have imagined.

Nnedi takes the reader on a journey from her hospital bed deep into her memories, from her painful first experiences with racism as a child in Chicago to her powerful visits to her parents’ hometown in Nigeria, where she got her first inkling that science fiction has roots beyond the West. This was not the Africa that Nnedi knew from Western literature - an Africa that she always read was a place left behind. The role of technology in Nigeria opened her eyes to future-looking Africa: cable TV and cell phones in the village, 419 scammers occupying the cybercafés, the small generator connected to her cousin’s desktop computer, everyone quickly adapting to portable tech devices due to unreliable power sources. Nnedi could see that Africa was far from broken, as she’d been taught, and her experience there planted the early seeds of sci-fi - a genre that speculates about technologies, societies, and social issues - from an entirely new lens.

In Broken Places & Outer Spaces, Nnedi uses her own experience as a jumping off point to follow the phenomenon of creativity born from hardship. From Frida Kahlo to Mary Shelly, she examines great artists and writers who have pushed through their limitations, using hardship to fuel their work. Through these compelling stories and her own, Nnedi reveals a universal truth: What we perceive as limitations have the potential to become our greatest strengths - far greater than when we were unbroken
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I came across this book when I was looking for own-voices books about disability. BROKEN PLACES & OUTER SPACERS was on a Buzzfeed List for memoirs on disability and illness, and I was immediately intrigued enough to buy the audiobook.

Nnedi Okorafor is an author of Afro-futurism SF and I've been meaning to read her fiction for so long. I had no idea that she'd experienced paralysis following what should've been routine surgery--and as someone who is also disabled, I immediately felt a connection to her. I've also been writing my own memoir and reading as many memoirs on disability and illness as I can, and I found the writing in this one so compulsive that I immediately wanted to dive back into my own memoir.

Okorafor gives a great overview of her childhood and her family, the genetic disorder she and her siblings inherited and how there was very much a 'before' and 'after' section to her life. I related to this so much, having been sporty myself before my body failed me.

This is a short read--but it covers so much. We learn how it was her disability that led her to start writing--something that she didn't think she'd have done was it not for this paralysis happening--and how her hallucinations during her initial time in hospital lured her into the speculative fiction world. We see how she's managing now as an adult, and we follow her through the difficult rehab process as a teenager.

This is a powerful read, highly recommended.

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