of Silence
of Silence
The Cartography
of Silence
A novel of memory, migration,
and the maps we draw in absence
When cartographer Adaeze Njoku inherits her late mother's unfinished atlas — a collection of hand-drawn maps of cities that no longer exist — she embarks on a journey across four continents and six decades. The Cartography of Silence is a novel about the geographies we carry inside us: language, grief, the borders of the self.
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"Okafor writes with the precision of a surveyor and the tenderness of someone who has lost everything she was trying to map. One of the decade's most necessary novels."
The New York Times Book Review -
"Capacious, devastating, luminous. The Cartography of Silence remakes the possibilities of the novel form."
Hilary Mantel — Booker Prize Committee -
"Every sentence earns its place. Okafor is the real thing."
Granta Magazine
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Essays & Press
Long-form criticism, personal essays, and reported pieces in journals and newspapers.