KISUMU

Fiction & Literature, Action Suspense, Literary
Cover of the book KISUMU by Okang'a Ooko, Oba Kunta Octopus
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Okang'a Ooko ISBN: 1230002422152
Publisher: Oba Kunta Octopus Publication: July 11, 2018
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Okang'a Ooko
ISBN: 1230002422152
Publisher: Oba Kunta Octopus
Publication: July 11, 2018
Imprint:
Language: English

A 1980s Far Echo of African Music Noir.

Kisumu. 1970s. Otis Dundos is a shy and awkward kid. He is just another wee-wee bare foot, horny-toed boy growing up with his dusty feet and bare chest having fun with dangerous adventures. In the ‘80s, then, as a man-boy he tries fit in. He is more an archetype than a flesh-and-blood person. He tries to observe and remember, now, as a young adult, to commit the memories to music in a lively and extensive fashion. Performing with Nico Opija and KDF in Kondele gives him the significant beginning and a journey into music.

As guitar student hitting all the required notes, Otis is the haunted genius. But KDF in Kondele is a training ground for demonology. He uncovers far more than he bargained for. He is desperate to leave Kondele dingy clubs to reach for the future. He seems to realize he is not accomplished until he performs in Nairobi. But the cold, cold heart Nairobi’s early ‘80s nefarious pop culture schools him into becoming a more spoiled artist. Returning to Kisumu with a new band, accompanied by queasy bandmates in the ranks of nefarious ne’er-do-wells, he spirals down into the heart of Kisumu's darkness, encountering a suppressed history of greed, envy, revenge, and exploitation. A tour of Europe makes him a megastar. But he still comes back as a normal Kisumuan working for the next day. His band, Victoria, maintains a rough timeline of 1980 through 1990 and serve to wind down the hysteria somewhat, and makes a fairly good case for an extraordinary achievement backmasking in heavy Urban Benga music.

Kisumu is always a slobbering, panting, salivating hotbed of anticipation and drooling expectancy. Kisumu is as much a town of problems as it is a town of drama, subdivision of fantasy. Drama? Dreams? Did he change Kisumu musically? That’s not the issue. The issue is for all his efforts, guitarist Otis Dundos always had bigger problems here in Kisumu like everbody else.

Providing a catharsis through comedy, lancing the lakeside city’s moral boil with satire, Kisumu tells the life ordinary men and women trying to live the Kenyan African dream. It’s is a story of humble beginning, awkward and misdirected fumbling and miraculous accomplishment.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

A 1980s Far Echo of African Music Noir.

Kisumu. 1970s. Otis Dundos is a shy and awkward kid. He is just another wee-wee bare foot, horny-toed boy growing up with his dusty feet and bare chest having fun with dangerous adventures. In the ‘80s, then, as a man-boy he tries fit in. He is more an archetype than a flesh-and-blood person. He tries to observe and remember, now, as a young adult, to commit the memories to music in a lively and extensive fashion. Performing with Nico Opija and KDF in Kondele gives him the significant beginning and a journey into music.

As guitar student hitting all the required notes, Otis is the haunted genius. But KDF in Kondele is a training ground for demonology. He uncovers far more than he bargained for. He is desperate to leave Kondele dingy clubs to reach for the future. He seems to realize he is not accomplished until he performs in Nairobi. But the cold, cold heart Nairobi’s early ‘80s nefarious pop culture schools him into becoming a more spoiled artist. Returning to Kisumu with a new band, accompanied by queasy bandmates in the ranks of nefarious ne’er-do-wells, he spirals down into the heart of Kisumu's darkness, encountering a suppressed history of greed, envy, revenge, and exploitation. A tour of Europe makes him a megastar. But he still comes back as a normal Kisumuan working for the next day. His band, Victoria, maintains a rough timeline of 1980 through 1990 and serve to wind down the hysteria somewhat, and makes a fairly good case for an extraordinary achievement backmasking in heavy Urban Benga music.

Kisumu is always a slobbering, panting, salivating hotbed of anticipation and drooling expectancy. Kisumu is as much a town of problems as it is a town of drama, subdivision of fantasy. Drama? Dreams? Did he change Kisumu musically? That’s not the issue. The issue is for all his efforts, guitarist Otis Dundos always had bigger problems here in Kisumu like everbody else.

Providing a catharsis through comedy, lancing the lakeside city’s moral boil with satire, Kisumu tells the life ordinary men and women trying to live the Kenyan African dream. It’s is a story of humble beginning, awkward and misdirected fumbling and miraculous accomplishment.

More books from Literary

Cover of the book Us Against You: A Novel by Fredrik Backman | Conversation Starters by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Paradise village by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book The Lay of the Land by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Les Cenci – suivi d'annexes by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Going into Society (Illustrated Edition) by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Going New Wave: a short story by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Le lion des flandres by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book The Ten Thousand Things by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book The Calpa & Notes Pertaining to a Panel in Salon D by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book God's Fool: A Novel by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Juliet's Nurse by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book My Mind Is No Longer Here by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Vengeance by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book The Autobiography of My Mother by Okang'a Ooko
Cover of the book Water Lily by Okang'a Ooko
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy