Damon Galgut Is on the February 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag

In his 40th year as a writer, last year’s Booker Prize winner talks to Open Country Mag about his artistic process, and his novel The Promise.
Open Country Mag Reissues Cover of Damon Galgut
Damon Galgut Is on the February 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag

When Damon Galgut won the Booker Prize last year for his ninth book and eighth novel The Promise, he used the opportunity to highlight African literature. “This has been a great year for African writing,” he said. “I’d like to accept this on behalf of all the stories told and untold, the writers heard and unheard from the remarkable continent that I come from. I hope people will take African writing a little more seriously now.”

He was referring to the fact that several of the year’s major international literary prizes had gone to Africans: the Nobel Prize to Tanzania’s Abdulrazak Gurnah, the second Black African to win; the International Booker Prize to Senegal’s David Diop; Portugal’s Cameos Award to Mozambique’s Paulina Chiziane, the first Black woman to win; and France’s Prix Goncourt to Senegal’s Mohamed Mbougar Sarr, the first Sub-Saharan African to win. English PEN’s Pinter Prize and PEN International’s Award for Freedom of Expression had also gone to Zimbabwe’s Tsitsi Dangarembga, who was on our first cover for December 2020.

Damon Galgut Is on the February 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag
FIRST COVER: Damon Galgut Is on the February 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag. Photo by Michaela Verity.
Damon Galgut Is on the Feb. 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag. Reissued Cover.
REISSUED COVER: Damon Galgut Is on the Feb. 2022 Cover of Open Country Mag. Reissued Cover.

More than only awards, there were books, too. A good summary of the year is our list of “The 60 Notable Books of 2021.” And yet as much as there are books, and progress in international reception, there remain major problems. Writers missing and tortured. Gaps in publishing and distribution in the continent. And these make Galgut’s decision to highlight the continent—a generosity of spirit in itself—even more crucial.

Galgut is the third South African to win the Booker Prize, after Nadine Gordimer and J.M. Coetzee, and the fifth African overall, with Nigeria’s Ben Okri and the British Nigerian Bernardine Evaristo also winners. Like Evaristo, he won his elevation much later in his career. But unlike any other previous winner—unlike any notable African writer at all—his career began in his teens.

His first book, the novel A Sinless Season, was written when he was just 17 and published at 19. He was a prodigy, but his career did not take off as he hoped. A different writer might have turned out differently, but he persisted. And this is where he is again similar to Evaristo: he persisted in style, with formal innovation that should have deterred him. Eventually, it got him two Booker Prize shortlistings, and then landed the win. (The Promise has just been shortlisted for the Rathbones Folio Prize as well.)

Galgut agreed to this story a few days before traveling to London for the prize ceremony. We spoke just before Christmas. He is the first South African on our cover, the first white African, and his story is one of steadiness, an artistic inspiration in the purest sense.

COVER STORY: “The Methods of Damon Galgut

More Cover Announcements

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Is on the September 2021 Cover of Open Country Mag

Teju Cole Is on the July 2021 Cover of Open Country Mag

Maaza Mengiste Is on the January 2021 Cover of Open Country Mag

Tsitsi Dangarembga Is on the December 2020 Cover of Open Country Mag

...

Otosirieze for Open Country Mag

4 Responses

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommendation

In his first interview in three years, the Open Country Mag editor opened up on a range of issues in African and global literature, from The New York Times’ exclusion of Africans from its “Best Books of the 21st Century” list to the need for “sustained critical thinking about the state of Nigeria and Africa.”
Staged by the Malawian artist Mirriam Francesca Nkosi, with sponsorship by Africa No Filter, it “focused on preserving, celebrating, and documenting these native plants and the traditional knowledge associated with them.”
Hosted by the East African activist Name Redacted, with sponsorship by Africa No Filter, “conversations like these provide a counter-narrative to predominant Western narratives of ‘coming out.'”

“An ambitious new magazine committed to African literature”

— Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Join 25,000+ subscribers to essential, in-depth stories in African literature, Nigerian film, & culture: inspiring Profiles, incisive reviews, thought-provoking features & conversations that happen nowhere else. It's premium access to the visions of changemakers, from icons to emerging voices. Plus key industry stories from Folio Nigeria by CNN.

We respect your privacy and will never send you Spam or sell your email.

Search

Top