Aug 22 2008

The Jive Talker is now in North America

Published by skambalu under personal

Samson’s book came out in North America, published by Free Press, on 12 August. Since I forgot to post anything at the time, I thought I would copy here the original post for the British launch. It has been updated to include all the reviews so far.

The Jive Talker

The Jive Talker is published in the UK by Jonathan Cape, Random House. It is available in North America under the title, “The Jive Talker: An Artist’s Genesis”, published by Free Press, a Simon & Schuster imprint.

“one of the funniest books I’ve read in years” – Gary Indiana, author of Do Everything in the Dark and The Schwarzenegger Syndrome

“Samson Kambalu has a beguiling voice, and The Jive Talker delivers the charming and rare story of Kambalu’s coming of age as an artist in Malawi.” – Daniel Bergner, author of In the Land of Magic Soldiers: A Story of White and Black in West Africa

“Funny, sad, shocking, pacey, bursting with energy and talent.” – Barbara Trapido, author of Temples of Delight and Frankie & Stankie

“… a lively, funny memoir … A pleasure to read, and just the thing to give to a disaffected teenager of a creative bent.” – Kirkus Reviews, New York

“… a wickedly dry memoir … Kambalu’s memoir comprises brief, ironical anecdotes and hilarious cameos of “raving eccentrics” …” – Publishers Weekly

“[Kambalu's] fumbling discovery of girls and pop music, his trials at the ‘Eton of Africa’ Kamuzu Academy and an interlude in South Africa where everyone rips him off, are humorously recounted but poverty and sickness, and above all Aids, add dark textures to Kambalu’s philosophy.” – Metro

“… some cutting observations of life in one of the poorest parts of Africa … The book has a poignancy and an authenticity that are impossible to ignore.” – The Irish Times

“… this is no misery memoir. On the contrary, it is often very funny, as well as original and earnest … the portrait is framed by a thoughtful intelligence that looks far beyond the concerns of adolescence … this riveting, brilliant book” – Susan Williams, The Independent

“This Malawian-born, award-winning conceptual artist uses his background and brilliant mind to craft a truly original book.” – Pride Magazine

“… revealing and touching memoir …” – Jenny Wood, Perthshire Advertiser

“The Jive Talker story [moves] beyond a mere personal account to make clearer Kambalu’s personal idiom in his life as an artist and make plain some of his ideas in art.” – The Daily Times, Malawi.

“In this ingenious, often seditious, book, Samson Kambalu takes no artistic license, writing with witty and powerful prose. The Jive Talker takes you into a period of African history that has rarely been touched on before.” – Travel Africa Magazine.

“It is an African memoir unlike any other I have read … it is absolutely hilarious … the young Samson, a kind of black Huckleberry Finn, full of courage and appetite … Kambalu relates all this with a child’s pinpoint sense of the absurd … Kambalu’s triumph is to give us a portrait of Africa which for once is multidimensional … this is a book filled with wonder, humour and hope. It is a magnificent achievement.” – Aminatta Forna, The Sunday Telegraph.

“[If] the eyes are the windows of the soul, the voice is the door to the logos. Walk in and take the full guided tour (with stereophonic sound effects) … Life wasn’t an idyll, but it was largely ideal. Read Kambalu, cry, clap your hands.” – Iain Finlayson, The Times.

“Samson has composed a brilliant autobiography. In eloquence and style of presentation, it matches the famous Barack Obama autobiographies … There is fun … I am sure that if the book had been written by a white man, he might have been kinder in his portrayal of Malawi.” – Gedion Nkhata, The Sunday Times, Malawi.

” … it’s a pleasure to have one’s memory sparked by so much well-observed detail … The material covered in The Jive Talker, which charts the ordinary life of a modern Malawian teenager in country and city from his own perspective, has never before been explored … The scenes describing the death of his father, the former fount of all knowledge to whom antipathy is later developed, are riven with contradictory passion … A sense of cleanly freedom – of “exercise” and “exorcise” – permeates this enjoyable book. Football playing and fun are presented as the necessary correctives to Banda’s Presbyterian gloom and the grimness of disease. The revolving heart of The Jive Talker, the Holy Ball idea will be Kambalu’s passport to Amsterdam and then the London art scene, where he continues to kick charmingly about, the living embodiment of good news from Africa.” – Giles Foden, The Guardian.

“His father … gave his son enough material to work with to have mightily pleased V. S. Naipaul, Salman Rushdie and Henry Miller, to name just three writers who seem to have contributed to Kambalu’s antic, Rabelaisian wit … this wildly readable and entertainingly ribald and roughneck book … A real wildman, this. Just read his discourses on rock ’n’ roll and his school band the Crazy Cops and how artist and finger-hardened rocker mate. A remarkable book from a unique sensibility and personality.” – Jeff Simon (Editor’s Choice), The Buffalo News.

“Kambalu’s memoir, The Jive Talker, is another form of exorcism and exercise, a literary, polyphonic performance of exuberance and delight … his tone in this memoir is surprisingly witty, and tautly composed anecdotes create a rollicking and rapid-fire pace … He is a master of the crystallizing and riotous anecdote and is Dickensian in his ability to bring characters to life.” – Joscelyn Jurich, bookforum.com.

“Kambalu’s writing shines with absurdist observational wit. He also deftly interjects relevant Malawian cultural and social history to reinforce his personal narrative. And although his experiences may be less decadent than those of self-crucifying Dandy in the Underworld author Sebastian Horsley, Kambalu’s off-kilter memoir is equally worthy of examination.” – Michael Sandlin, TimeOut New York.

“an unusual picture of Africa, multi-dimensional, comic as well as tragic, and palpably real.” – London Review Bookshop.

You can read more at The Root Magazine, which published a section from the first chapter to mark Father’s Day. If you have a Barnes and Noble account, you can also read the first 30 pages or so of the American Free Press (Simon & Schuster) edition here.

The Jive Talker is on sale now, and can be ordered from (amongst others) Amazon, Borders and Random House.

Find out more about The Jive Talker and Samson’s work at his Holyballism website.

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Aug 04 2008

The Jive Talker Book Launch

Published by skambalu under personal

Last Thursday was a very special occasion, since it was the official launch of Samson’s book, The Jive Talker or, How to Get a British Passport. This was published by Jonathan Cape (Random House) in the UK on 3 July, and will be published by Free Print (Simon and Schuster) in the USA and Canada on 12 August.

We had a lovely evening, hosted by Iniva (Institute of International Visual Arts) at Rivington Place. Samson installed 52 Holy Balls; to those who have already read the book, these hopefully made sense, and to those who have yet to read the book, their meaning will soon become much clearer! Those who bought Holyballist Bibles have had their numbers recorded in the Book of Life.

It was great to welcome so many people from so many different walks of life to the launch. There were family and friends from Scotland, old friends from Malawi, colleagues and curators from Nottingham, curators from the Netherlands and Belgium, teachers from London, people involved in publishing and in art from London and other places around the country. Many people bought books, even those who had one or more at home already, and Samson spent the evening talking to people and signing books.

I was sort of in charge of talking photos, at which I failed miserably. We had just bought a new flash which I didn’t know how to use, so for the first half an hour it was switched off altogether, and when Samson realised and turned it on, I still didn’t realise I had to give it a chance to charge up again between takes, so at least half the photos are either too dark or too yellow. My own camera was running out of battery – I kept expecting it to tell me to “change the batteries”, but I should really have made my own decision and done that earlier, then I could have taken lots of nice photos on a camera I know and understand! So that was a disappointment the following day, but fortunately it did not spoil the evening at all.

A couple of the special literary guests were Susan Williams, who wrote the excellent review in the Independent, and Steve Chimombo, a well known Malawian writer who also writes tirelessly about the arts in Malawi in order to promote them and who has therefore followed Samson’s work and written articles about him, for example in WASI and as the biography section in Black My Story, the book that went along with the exhibition of the same name at the Museum de Paviljoens in Almere, the Netherlands. I can’t begin to mention everyone else that came along to celebrate with us, including other artists and writers, but may I take this opportunity to say thank you to you all, and I hope you enjoyed the evening as much as I did!

I am about to add some photos below, but if you are interested in a more unbiased post on the launch, you can read a review in Cally’s Kitchen; the Dunadan has also written a review of The Jive Talker. (And it’s always nice to visit a different blog!)

Right. I am now about to find some photos to upload …

52 Holy Balls, Iniva

52 Holy Balls, Iniva

Installation at Iniva, Rivington Place.

Installation at Iniva, Rivington Place

The Installation at Iniva

Another installation view of 52 Holy Balls and some Holy Bibles

Speeches during the launch

Speeches during the launch

People with a Malawian connection

People with a Malawian connection

Kicking Holy Balls about

Exercises and Exorcisms at Rivington Place

At the end of the evening!

Samson and I at the end of the evening

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Jul 03 2008

The Jive Talker, Or How to Get a British Passport

Published by skambalu under personal

The Jive Talker

The Jive Talker is published today (3 July 2008) by Jonathan Cape, Random House.

“one of the funniest books I’ve read in years” – Gary Indiana, author of Do Everything in the Dark and The Schwarzenegger Syndrome

“Samson Kambalu has a beguiling voice, and The Jive Talker delivers the charming and rare story of Kambalu’s coming of age as an artist in Malawi.” – Daniel Bergner, author of In the Land of Magic Soldiers: A Story of White and Black in West Africa

“Funny, sad, shocking, pacey, bursting with energy and talent.” – Barbara Trapido, author of Temples of Delight and Frankie & Stankie

“… a lively, funny memoir … A pleasure to read, and just the thing to give to a disaffected teenager of a creative bent.” – Kirkus Reviews, New York

“… a wickedly dry memoir … Kambalu’s memoir comprises brief, ironical anecdotes and hilarious cameos of “raving eccentrics” …” – Publishers Weekly

“[Kambalu's] fumbling discovery of girls and pop music, his trials at the ‘Eton of Africa’ Kamuzu Academy and an interlude in South Africa where everyone rips him off, are humorously recounted but poverty and sickness, and above all Aids, add dark textures to Kambalu’s philosophy.” – Metro

“… some cutting observations of life in one of the poorest parts of Africa … The book has a poignancy and an authenticity that are impossible to ignore.” – The Irish Times

“… this is no misery memoir. On the contrary, it is often very funny, as well as original and earnest … the portrait is framed by a thoughtful intelligence that looks far beyond the concerns of adolescence … this riveting, brilliant book” – Susan Williams, The Independent

“This Malawian-born, award-winning conceptual artist uses his background and brilliant mind to craft a truly original book.” – Pride Magazine

“… revealing and touching memoir …” – Perthshire Advertiser

“The Jive Talker story [moves] beyond a mere personal account to make clearer Kambalu’s personal idiom in his life as an artist and make plain some of his ideas in art.” – The Daily Times, Malawi.

“In this ingenious, often seditious, book, Samson Kambalu takes no artistic license, writing with witty and powerful prose. The Jive Talker takes you into a period of African history that has rarely been touched on before.” – Travel Africa Magazine.

“It is an African memoir unlike any other I have read … it is absolutely hilarious … the young Samson, a kind of black Huckleberry Finn, full of courage and appetite … Kambalu relates all this with a child’s pinpoint sense of the absurd … Kambalu’s triumph is to give us a portrait of Africa which for once is multidimensional … this is a book filled with wonder, humour and hope. It is a magnificent achievement.” – Aminatta Forna, The Sunday Telegraph.

“[If] the eyes are the windows of the soul, the voice is the door to the logos. Walk in and take the full guided tour (with stereophonic sound effects) … Life wasn’t an idyll, but it was largely ideal. Read Kambalu, cry, clap your hands.” – Iain Finlayson, The Times.

“Samson has composed a brilliant autobiography. In eloquence and style of presentation, it matches the famous Barack Obama autobiographies … There is fun … I am sure that if the book had been written by a white man, he might have been kinder in his portrayal of Malawi.” – Gedion Nkhata, The Sunday Times, Malawi.

You can read more at The Root Magazine, which published a section from the first chapter to mark Father’s Day. If you have a Barnes and Noble account, you can also read the first 30 pages or so of the American Free Press (Simon & Schuster) edition here.

The Jive Talker is on sale now, and can be ordered from (amongst others) Amazon, Borders and Random House.

Find out more about The Jive Talker and Samson’s work at his Holyballism website.

It will be published in America on 12 August under the title, “The Jive Talker: An Artist’s Genesis”, published by Free Press, a Simon & Schuster imprint.

One response so far