The re-issue of archival volumes ALT 1 to ALT 14 makes the complete
series available and provides the historical perspective of these early
contributions to the literature and its criticism.
The intention of the African Literature Today series [ALT] was, and
still is, to encourage African writing in any language, whether of
fiction, poetry or plays, and also to encourage its criticism. The
critic's role, according toEldred Durosimi Jones in his 1968
Introduction to ALT 1, is to make the work accessible to a wider
readership and to help establish literary standards for African
literature: "The more permissive the publisher's policy is, the more
necessary becomes the function of the critic."
This book combines the first 4 volumes in the series, which had been
published as single volumes between 1968 and 1970, then combined into
one volume in 1972. It includes Bernth Lindfors' essay "The palm wine
with which Achebe's words are eaten", plus early reviews of Elechi
Amadi's The Concubine, Aimé Césaire's Une Saison au Congo, Flora Nwapa's
Efuru and Ngugi's A Grainof Wheat.