Alan davies take the duck into the echo chamber plus#Williams is explicit about this in his acknowledgements, citing books on colonial Africa he has adapted passages from, plus others by Georges Perec, Bruno Schulz and Isaac will be a careless reader who isn't impelled to flip back to the start of the book on finishing it, to seek out the original sources of all those resonances". Barely a character appears but they launch into an anecdote, a fable or a cautionary tale.For the echo chamber isn't just the human head, womb and chest (though it is all of those things): it is the novel form itself, made out of echoes of other novels, and itself. Jonathan Gibbs of The Independent calls it a remarkable novel, "This is a book in love with stories.James Hopkin writing in The Guardian praises the power of the embedded narratives despite the similarity of some of the voices but he concludes, "Stuffed with stories, literary references and peculiar details, a history of troubled objects, this beguiling novel is a work of astonishing the time you finish this rich and resonant book, your ears are sure to be twitching".At St Andrews University he studied Imperial history and was shocked when he realised how little he was taught about the violence underpinning colonialism, for example the Benin Massacre and it was this need to reveal some of this truth which provoked him to write the novel. Whilst studying History at the University of Edinburgh he became fascinated by the end of the Colonial period in West Africa. In an interview with the Scottish Book Trust, Williams reveals that his interest in Nigeria started with authors such as Amos Tutuola, Cyprian Ekwensi, Buchi Emecheta, Ben Okri and Ken Saro-Wiwa. The novel concerns Evie Steppman, who aged 54 and living in Gullane in Scotland tells of her life growing up in 1940s Lagos at the end of British rule in Nigeria, and more specifically of her auditory abilities as she maps the world around her through her amazing sense of hearing, beginning in the womb.
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