The first in a trilogy about the last emperor of southern Mozambique
by one of Africa's most important writers
Southern Mozambique, 1894. Sergeant Germano de Melo is posted to the
village of Nkokolani to oversee the Portuguese conquest of territory
claimed by Ngungunyane, the last of the leaders of the state of Gaza,
the second-largest empire led by an African. Ngungunyane has raised an
army to resist colonial rule and with his warriors is slowly approaching
the border village. Desperate for help, Germano enlists Imani, a
fifteen-year-old girl, to act as his interpreter. She belongs to the
VaChopi tribe, one of the few who dared side with the Portuguese. But
while one of her brothers fights for the Crown of Portugal, the other
has chosen the African emperor. Standing astride two kingdoms, Imani is
drawn to Germano, just as he is drawn to her. But she knows that in a
country haunted by violence, the only way out for a woman is to go
unnoticed, as if made of shadows or ashes.
Alternating between the voices of Imani and Germano, Mia Couto's Woman
of the Ashes combines vivid folkloric prose with extensive historical
research to give a spellbinding and unsettling account of war-torn
Mozambique at the end of the nineteenth century.