'You awoke to a lukewarm gnawing at your stiff memory.' A Quick Q&A with #WriterPrompt winner Chukwuebuka Leonard Ibeh.

Falling. Slipping. Descending.

You awoke to a lukewarm gnawing at your stiff memory. You knew you were on air, falling, perhaps to hell. But when you placed your palms down, you felt solid cold floor. You did not know if your eyes were open, or closed. That discomforted you.

You knew that by now Aunty Jidenna would be standing by the corridor, glass of water, undrunk in her hand, asking Mohammed for the hundredth time if he had seen you. Uncle Mezie would be propped on the sofa, eyes blazing furiously, snapping at Aunty Jidenna, "How extravagant! A girl of sixteen! You couldn't even watch her." And Aunty Jidenna would say, "But she was upstairs chatting with her laptop when I last checked."

You felt a being beside you. The person had a strong stench of semen and smoke. She spoke : “They are coming for you, sister."

You bit your lip until you could taste the saltiness of your blood. You wanted to cry. You turned to her to speak but stopped. You did not need to ask her to know that she, like you, had been told by the smooth-voiced John on Facebook to meet him somewhere. John, the good boy. Or so people said.

The 2nd person voice in Chukwuebuka's dark short about the web was unexpected and gripped the judges. We had to know more about the precocious young talent behind it 

You are Managing Editor of Bougainvillea Magazine. Could you tell us more about the project and your role in bringing it forward?

IBEH: Yes, I am. Bougainvillea Magazine is an online literary magazine. We’re starting on the web and hoping to expand our horizon as time goes on). It is dedicated to publishing fiction, art, poetry, creative non-fiction etc. from any part of the world, although our main focus is Africa. The magazine, actually, is not fully launched yet. We are kind of taking our time because we want to come out great. It was totally my idea, supported by a few remarkable people who share this dream with me.  So, when it is fully launched, I'll serve as the Managing Editor.

Do you find it easier or harder trying to shape an idea for a micro short rather than a novel? Why?

IBEH: Um, It depends on the story itself. Sometimes I find it easier trying to shape an idea in a short story and sometimes a novel. Micro fiction is something else. Most times, it's not more than 300 words, and trying to shape a meaningful story within these limited words can be extremely difficult.

What African writers motivate you to raise your writing game?

IBEH: I think I'd have to say [Chimamanda Ngozi] Adichie. I absolutely adore her, really. And then Helon Habila, Chika Unigwe, NoViolet Bulawayo, the amazing Pettina Gappah and E. C. Osondu. I could go on and on but these are authors whose stories have a kind of connection to me.

Chukwuebuka Leonard Ibeh was born in Nigeria in 2000. His short fiction and non-fiction have appeared in Tuck Magazine, Dwart Online, Jotters United, PenEgg etc. He won the inaugural JohnVic Short Story Prize in 2011.

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Interview by Tiah Beautement a.k.a. @ms_tiahmarie

'They invented gods to beg.' An Interview with TJ Benson #WriterPrompt Winner.

All they wanted was water. The one thing their money could not afford. They roamed from city to city. They scavenged the jungles and wilderness. In the desert they painted hills black to absorb the sun and melt the clouds. They dug dry river beds and coaxed wells.

They invented gods to beg. They divided rocks for at least its memory. They believed the memory of it was better than nothing. Soon some of them began to fall into a death sleep lured by its refreshing memory. Those who fought it to survive were terrified.

A little girl gave up her life to bring water. She closed her eyes, stretched out her hands and got swept up in a nostalgic flood. It came down in torrents, darkening the sky and they stretched their hands to receive it. They didn’t know it wasn’t going to stop. They didn’t know they were going to die.

What motivates you to be a better writer?

BENSON: Life itself. It can be so beautiful and painful at times. Even the pain can be beautiful.

Do you approach writing as a craft or as an art?

BENSON: As an art first before craft, maybe if I had an academic training in creative writing it would be different. I saw the last sentence of my piece without knowing how to end it but I just continued anyway. Little leaps of faith, like walking into a room full of antiques to explore with a blindfold. I don't know if that is a craft that can be honed.

Who are the African writers that grab your attention?

BENSON: I love Mehul Gohil. The range of his imagination is just aaah! Then I love Ndinda Kioku aah Ndinda! Then Okwiri Oduor, her stories make me proud to be a part of this generation. Everything I've read from her is a masterpiece, no sentences to waste: in every sentence she blows your mind. There is Clifton Gachagua and Michael Ogah, the consistency of his genius and everydayness of his stories is just refreshing.

Tell us about your experience with Expound magazine.

BENSON: Well I just want to say I am proud of the team. The quality of work produced each issue is really impressive so I am happy to work as the photography editor. Just to add also, I love Leslie Nneka Arimah! The brusqueness of her stories has sharpened my short stories.

 

TJ Benson is a Nigerian short story writer, creative photographer and pasta enthusiast whose works have appeared online and in print journals like Kalahari Review, Paragram (UK), Afridiaspora, and Contemporary Literary Review India. He is the photography editor of Expound Magazine and his short story ‘An Abundance of Yellow Paper’ won the Amab-HBF prize this January. Another story of his, ‘Passion Fruit’ was shortlisted for the Awele Prize. He has multiple projects in the works including a collection, Self, of photography and poetry, a collection of Afro Sci-Fi stories titled We Won't Fade into Darkness and a novel. He cooks and share thoughts on Twitter and Instagram via @tjbensonng

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Interview by Tiah Beautement a.k.a. @ms_tiahmarie

 

'There was a ghostly ambience inside the house.' An interview with Thabo Katlholo #WriterPrompt winner.

I'd always known he loved her more and I'd grown to accept things as they were. I was not surprised when he died a week ago and left her everything; the bankbook, the twelve cattle and the Mazda skorokoro - but to be frank, his death is my rebirth. Good grounds for my pilgrimage back home.

A lot has changed in the past fourteen years but I remember this gravel road; the donkey cart that brought me here from Namibia when I was fifteen. I remember many more things about my 'taking' more than all else.

My first night in Ncojane, the dimly-lit, almost non-existent village in western Botswana. I was afraid - not of the man I'd been married to or his menacing first wife who was rumoured to have eaten the eyes of the second wife I'd replaced. I was afraid of the dead whose house I'd been installed into.

There was a ghostly ambience inside the house. I felt the dead woman lurking on the walls. Her gouged-out eyes staring at me from the dark thatch; her breath soft on my earlobe telling me to run.

Thabo Katlholo kicked off the #WriterPrompt sessions for 2016 winning with his ominous story of marriage. His debut novel The Mud Hut I Grew Upon was published in 2014.

 

Which African writers (or books) inspired you to write? 

KATLHOLO: Wole Soyinka. I have been a big fan of Soyinka’s plays since I was a boy and The Lion and the Jewel is my all-time favourite. I still own a copy of the book and often I go back to it for tips on creating dialogue between my characters.

What is the best writing tip you've been given?

KATLHOLO: Thick skin is compulsory in the writing business. Learn to take bad reviews and accept good reviews without getting big-headed.

What have you been reading lately?

KATLHOLO: I am reading two books simultaneously. At the office, Dr. Unity Dow’s Juggling Truth and at home, Terry Hayes’s I’m A Pilgrim.

Thabo Katlholo is a poet and novelist currently residing in Botswana's capital city, Gaborone. He holds a BSc in Biological Sciences from the University of Botswana and Certification in Project Management from the University Of Stellenbosch Business School. When he is not writing, Thabo is in Public Health and uses most of his time to advocate for tobacco control policies in Botswana. He blogs at www.thabokatlholo.com

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Interview by Tiah Beautement a.k.a @ms_tiahmarie