The Orphans of Silence

The Orphans of Silence

Onwudiwe I Onwudiwe

14,20 €
IVA incluido
Disponible
Editorial:
Arksilver Press
Año de edición:
2025
Materia
Antologías (no poéticas)
ISBN:
9781919311654
14,20 €
IVA incluido
Disponible

Selecciona una librería:

  • Librería Samer Atenea
  • Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
  • Kálamo Books
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 A literary historical novel of war, memory, trauma, and redemption set in postcolonial Africa, The Orphans of Silence explores the untold human cost of the Biafran War and the haunting legacy it left on a generation born in its shadow.A generation after the fighting ended, the land still wakes in silence - the heavy, uncanny quiet that follows a long nightmare. Beneath that hush lies the aftertaste of conflict: villages rebuilt on ruins, graves disguised as gardens, and a people who learned to bury their words along with their dead. They say the dead are silent, but here it is the living who have forgotten how to speak.In this deeply human and hauntingly atmospheric novel, the story unfolds through the eyes of a child born just before the war began. As he grows, he inherits not peace but the fragile burden of unspoken memories. The world around him is filled with wounds that no one will acknowledge - empty school desks, fathers who scream through the night, mothers who whisper prayers to Ala, the Earth goddess, asking forgiveness for blood-soaked soil. Even the gods seem weary, their once-powerful oracles reduced to faint echoes.Amid this suffocating quiet, the young narrator begins to question what everyone else fears to remember. Why are the elders terrified of the past? Why do the rivers murmur like mourners? What truths were buried beneath marketplaces, churches, and farmlands when the guns went still? These questions spark a journey into forbidden memory - a quest not for vengeance, but for understanding.Drawing upon Igbo cosmology, myth, ancestral memory, and African spiritual traditions, the novel weaves history and mysticism into a seamless tapestry. The River Woman sings to the dead. Ancestors cross thin veils. The boundary between the living and the spirit realm trembles as the protagonist discovers that silence itself is a living inheritance - one carried in blood and shaped by trauma.The Orphans of Silence is both an elegy and an awakening. It captures the lingering trauma of war, the quiet resilience of those who rebuild when the world looks away, and the courage required to break a silence enforced by fear. It is a meditation on how nations remember and how forgetting becomes another form of death.Written in luminous, evocative prose that recalls the lyricism of Ben Okri, the emotional depth of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, and the haunting clarity of Elie Wiesel, Onwudiwe I. Onwudiwe offers a narrative that is intimate, universal, and unforgettable. For readers drawn to Half of a Yellow Sun, Things Fall Apart, The Kite Runner, or literary fiction exploring war, displacement, trauma, resilience, and cultural memory, this novel will linger long after the final page.The Orphans of Silence is more than a story of war. It is a testament to survival, a requiem for forgotten voices, and a call to remembrance - one whispered truth at a time.

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