Tshuma's brilliant layering of competing images and metaphors is one of the many marvels of this wise and demanding novel. It's a remarkable feat. Tshuma shows us how much work it takes to efface the past, and, through House of Stone , she proves that those efforts are no match for a novel as ambitious and ingenious as this one.--Dinaw Mengestu, New York Times Book Review With luminous language, Novuyo Rosa Tshuma explores the treacherous terrain of colonization and decolonization, remembering and forgetting, and love and betrayal. The result is a gripping account of revolution and its aftermath, both for a country and for one man.--Viet Thanh Nguyen, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Sympathizer Novuyo Rosa Tshuma has written a towering and multilayered gem. House of Stone is one of the greatest-ever novels about Zimbabwe. What a timely, resonant gift.
--NoViolet Bulawayo, author of We Need New Names House of Stone is a novel of such maturity, such linguistic agility and scope that you'll scarcely believe it's a debut. Tshuma has set her formidable talents to no less a subject than the emergence of Zimbabwe from the darkness and tumult of colonialism. It's fierce and energetic right to the end, and whip smart to boot.--Ayana Mathis, author of The Twelve Tribes of Hattie To call [ House of Stone ] clever or ambitious is to do it a disservice--it is both, but also more than that.Tshuma is incapable of writing a boring sentence.By the end, she has managed to not only sum up Zimbabwean history, but also all of African colonial history: from devastating colonialism to the bitter wars of independence to the euphoria of self-rule and the disillusionment of the present. It is an extraordinary achievement for a first novel.--Helon Habila, Guardian Tshuma's writing is smart, original, feisty, brutal and gorgeous.
She hits the perfect note on every single page in this gripping novel about history, belonging and power. This is the work of an incredible, incredible talent.--Chika Unigwe, author of On Black Sisters Street Novuyo Tshuma is purefire.--Garth Greenwell, author of What Belongs to You A revealing chronicle of revolutionary and postcolonial Zimbabwe and a finely engraved portrait of obsession, told in fluid, absorbing language. --Library Journal A multilayered, twisting, and surprising whirlwind of a novel that is as impressive as it is heartbreaking.--Kirkus Reviews.