Ratings85
Average rating4
Such solid world and character building. The narrator was amazing with the Nigerian-accented characters but the American-accented characters kind of all had the same voice. With the intense magic and plot I think this can be read by both middle and high schoolers and would be a great companion to Children of Blood and Bone. Not as powerful as her Binti series but fast-moving and vibrant. Feel pretty compelled to read the second book now. ETA: Also, the new cover release for this series was a savvy choice. I had the original book in my last library and it didn't sell nearly like this new cover set does. Authors hardly ever get a say in the presentation but publishers need to push harder for better art & representation!
I had a hard time getting into it at first only to realize you're supposed to feel as Sunny does. A delightful introduction to Okorafor's works!
Really enjoyed this - I haven't read much of anything set outside the US (or Europe, I suppose), and that's a huge failing on my part. I loved the modern Nigerian setting and the mythology that was used. The final confrontation with the Big Bad came on a bit abruptly for me, but this was a fun book and I'd love to read more in this universe.
2.5 stars
I'm a big fan of the Binti series so I decided to try this one. Sadly, it just wasn't for me. I thought it was ok, but I didn't enjoy it enough to continue the series.
I really enjoyed the book the middle was a bit slow for me, but it picked up in the end. The story is very character driven whereas I thought the story was going to be action packed. Still I can't wait to read the next book
This contemporary Afrofuturism and Afrofantasy is set in present day Nigeria. 12 year old albino Sunny Nwazue was born in the United States to Nigerian parents. Now living again in Nigeria with her family, Sunny feels like an outsider at school and at home. Her classmates view her as a “witch or ghost” because of her albinism, and incidents of bullying and prejudice are sprinkled throughout the story. Sunny discovers that she and her closest friends are “Leopard People” – Nigerian witches, and their quest begins to take down a serial killer.
Okorafor's ability to share Nigerian folklore, magic, and elements of Nigerian life will appeal to teens and adults. For those interested in continuing Sunny's story the sequel Akata Warrior can be queued up for their TBR pile.
Note: Yetide Badaki's narration of the audio book version is superb!
So do I know anyone who has ever done the Popsugar reading challenges? I heard about them this year and so I’m going to try to do the challenge for 2025. They give 50 prompts that you need to fill with 50 different books. We’ll see how it goes!!
Anyway…Akata Witch is the December read for the Sword and Laser podcast. I’m also using it to fill Popsugar prompt #14 “A book about a nontraditional education.” The book follows Sunny, a Nigerian girl born in America who is also albino. She and her family have returned to Nigeria to live and Sunny has a hard time fitting in. This both becomes better and worse when Sunny learns she is a Leopard person (a magical person). She finds her way to new friends and teachers and learns to take her place in this new world.
This has a lot in common with other magical coming-of-age stories (think Harry Potter, etc), but the setting and characters in this book are unique and fun to read. I especially enjoyed that the way to earn magic currency is to learn new things. In a few places some of the side characters seem a bit one-dimensional (maybe because the book is YA?), but generally a good read. I believe this is the first of a trilogy and I would like to read more!
Short Review: This is a young adult magical realism tinged fantasy book. I have read a couple of Okorafor's books in the last 18 months or so and I have really enjoyed them. She is great at world building and characters. I think this one was a little weak in plot. The climax was way too quick. But the book was worth reading and there is now a second book in the series, although it was not published until six years after this one. I think I will wait until the audiobook for Akata Warrior comes out to read that one. The audiobook of this was excellent.
My full review is on my blog at http://bookwi.se/akata-witch/
I highly recommend this book for the preteen age group. The world and mythology is super fun and from the start I thought this was going to be 5 stars for me. My personal enjoyment though was meh as I found the dialogue (and there was a lot of it) and plot to be very preteen - and sometimes even younger - and I wasn't interested as someone who reads teen/YA and adult.
This was a breath of fresh air, very cool, imaginative, and off the beaten path, especially when it comes to fantasy. I zipped right through this tale and loved the characters, the setting, and easy pace at which the story unfolded. I will likely read more by this author.
2.5 stars only because the younger end of the YA spectrum is too young for my taste. The writing and interplay between the characters is great.
When I was an undergraduate, our professors were very determined to make sure that us students had as well-rounded a reading background as possible. They made and encouraged us to read as many literary classics and award-winners as we could, to explore as many genres as we dared, and if we chose, to pick a handful we would specialize in so we could go into more in-depth reading. Most of us had already read many of the classic Greek and Roman material (if one hadn't read Homer, at the very least, then it was almost impossible to get into the program), and many of us had read The Arabian Nights or were in the process of reading it.We were also very familiar with many Philippine and Western classics, and some (such as myself) were already certain which genres we were going to focus on.
But this was not enough to our professors. There was a much wider world of reading, they believed, and they ensured that our horizons were broadened. A great many Chinese and Japanese authors were thrown in our direction, along with a healthy serving of Eastern European and South American authors (Wislawa Szymborska and Octavio Paz were my personal revelations during this time). And since most of us had read very little African literature beyond some grasp of various mythologies, they made sure we got a good serving of prose and poetry from that particular area of the world. Adhiambo Owuor's short story “Weight of Whispers” was the start, and then we were assigned Ben Okri's Booker Prize-winning novel The Famished Road, which for many of us was a revelation regarding the wonders of African literature.
I hadn't thought of The Famished Road in a while, not until Hope asked me to look for a novel titled Akata Witch by Nnedi Okorafor. I got myself my own copy to read, especially since she thought I might find it interesting, and then I gave her her copy. And since I just finished reading Leviathan Wakes and therefore needed something in the fantasy line of reading, I decided to go for Akata Witch and see what it was all about. Now, I'd lost quite a bit of my faith in young adult fiction since Harry Potter came to an end and the Twilight Saga filled in the gap, but every so often I do find something good: Scott Westerfeld's Leviathan Trilogy is a great example of this. Fortunately, Akata Witch is another great example of young adult fiction in a post-Harry Potter world.
Now that I mention Harry Potter, Akata Witch is very similar to that. Sunny Nwazue is a strange mix: born to Nigerian parents in America, who then moved back to Nigeria when she was nine. This might not have been so bad, in truth, if it only involved adjusting to an entirely new culture, but Sunny is also an albino - something which has some rather negative connotations in the folk superstitions of Africa, on top of all the other prejudice that goes on against women and foreigners (or anyone born outside of Nigeria) that Sunny has to deal with everyday. However, Sunny isn't as ordinary as she thinks she is: she's very, very special, because she turns out to be one of the Leopard People, a select group of people who can work magic. With her friends Orlu, Chichi, and Sasha, she realizes that there's more to the world than she thinks there is, and that they might be the only ones who can stop something very, very evil from setting foot in the world.
Almost immediately, the parallels with Harry Potter are extremely obvious: young person thinks they're not quite special, but it turns out they are, and moreover, said young person is possessed of unique magical talents that said young person must use in order to combat evil. In order to master their capabilities, the young person must attend a secret school where various teachers and mentor figures guide her or him on their way to defeating the aforementioned iteration of evil. However, to say that Akata Witch is a direct copy of Harry Potter would be doing the novel a great disservice, because while they share patterns in common, Akata Witch deals with a great many other things that Harry Potter does not.
One of the very first, most obvious things that distinguish this novel from Harry Potter is its setting: Africa, but Nigeria, more specifically. It does not, however, attempt to romanticize or make the setting overly exotic: it is simply a setting, like any other, and though it is very different from the ones familiar to the average Western reader, these differences are merely a result of the fact that this is a very different culture from typical American or European culture. Exotic details like food and types of clothing are mentioned casually, with minimal explanation as to what they are, and it is up to the reader to find out what they are, precisely, or infer from the narration what they might be.
Another interesting aspect about this book is how it handles issues of race and feminism. One would think these are rather sensitive issues to talk about in a young-adult book, but I really think Okorafor does it pretty well here. Issues about what it means to be a girl are brought up constantly: for instance, how Sunny constantly faces prejudice from boys, who don't want her to play football because she's a girl, even though she's a pretty good player (something she proves in a very interesting scene in the middle third of the book). There is also mention made of women who may have children, but may not marry, for very specific reasons, and the prejudice they face in patriarchal Nigerian society. Another interesting thing is how some of the most powerful characters are women, with Sunny's eventual mentor being one of them. As for race, that's presented here too. Sunny herself faces prejudice for being born American and for being an albino, and her friend Sasha also speaks about how difficult it is to be an African-American in both America and Africa.
Not even Harry Potter addresses these issues as clearly as Akata Witch does, but what's more important is that bringing these issues to light absolutely does not get in the way of the story. There is no attempt to be preachy or didactic at any point in the narrative, but keen readers will pick up those issues regardless, and recognize them for what they are. They will smile when Sunny finally overcomes her insecurities regarding her uncertain position in Nigerian society as a girl and as a Nigerian-American, and will be particularly pleased when she proves that being female has absolutely nothing to do with her skill as a football player.
Another thing that really pleased me about this book was how knowledge was put forward as being more valuable than material wealth. In the novel, the Leopard People use a special currency called chittim, which falls from the sky whenever the person learns something new, with the amount and value being dependent upon the degree of knowledge acquired. This knowledge has nothing to do with book learning: it's about self-knowledge, about truths learned about oneself. One doesn't get chittim for memorizing a juju, but one does get it if one performs the magic correctly. In Sunny's case, for instance, when she first learned and accepted that she was one of the Leopard People, the revelation was such that she earned a substantial amount of chittim. Every time Sunny or her friends gains even more knowledge, they are rewarded. It's interesting to note that it is apparently the universe that does this rewarding, since it is only the gaining of knowledge that makes the chittim fall from the sky, and while one can keep the chittim one earns, one can't withdraw it from a bank, for instance, because it has to be earned from the universe with new knowledge. The wealthiest people in Leopard society, therefore, are those who have a great deal of knowledge: generally old scholars, since experience and book learning are both necessary for accumulating chittim.
This idea of measuring wealth based on knowledge is something that the Leopard People often compare with the way non-magical people (called “Lambs”) prefer to measure wealth by accumulating power and material goods. Leopard People frown on this tendency, and when other Leopard People begin to fall into the same trap, they are looked down upon by the rest of Leopard society, because they firmly believe that, once one of the Leopard People begins to hunger for more and more power and more and more money, then they begin walking the path to darkness - something which the main antagonist of the story is said to have done. At the very least, such folk are looked at askance by their fellow Leopards.
Other interesting themes, such as the importance of teamwork and balance, are also put forward throughout the course of the story, and mostly through the interaction between Sunny and her friends. Fortunately, they are a very interesting bunch: steady Orlu, with his tendency to think things through and stick by the rules; mischievous Chichi, who refuses to tell anyone her real age and is constantly pushing boundaries; and rule-breaking Sasha, who got into trouble in the Unitd States and was sent to Nigeria to learn to discipline his temper. Orlu is the one who is closest to Sunny, mostly because Sunny thinks he's the most sensible - and she isn't altogether incorrect in that regard. Chichi and Sasha are fun, but obviously a lot more prone to taking risks - mostly because they are extremely smart and extremely talented, both possessing photographic memories. Orlu, and then later Sunny, try to keep Chichi and Sasha in line as best as they can, but they don't always succeed. Fortunately, their activities don't get them into too much trouble, and their exceptional talents do prove invaluable during those moments when they must work together to overcome a crisis.
The world itself is, of course, endlessly fascinating. The take on magic here is straight out of African (mostly West African) folklore and superstition, including the concept of the masquerade - not in the sense of the Venetian masked ball, but in a more primal, more magical sense of the word. An article from the National Geographic's April 2012 issue, titled Tangible Spirits by Cathy Newman ( photography by Phyllis Galembo), explains the concept of the masquerade as understood in Africa more thoroughly. The concept of the masquerade in Akata Witch isn't all that different, but far more dangerous, because it involves actually summoning the spirit itself - something which could potentially kill the caster, and therefore is magic reserved only for those who are strong enough and knowledgeable enough to do so. Aside from the high-level magic of masquerades, there are other, smaller magics, accomplished through special rituals that may or may not involve human hair, human blood, animal parts, mysterious powders, drawing symbols with chalk, incantations, or all of the above. Instead of wands, the Leopard People use juju knives, which can also be used to draw symbols in the air for certain spells, or to cut a part of space into which to speak an incantation. Language is crucial here, with many spells requiring knowledge of a particular African language - a problem for Sasha, who doesn't speak a lot of any African language; Sunny has no such problem, because she can speak Igbo. The system of magic is extremely intriguing, and while it's rather confusing at first, it all gets explained enough later on that the reader can figure it all out rather easily, especially if one has already read books or stories about African myth and folklore.
Overall, Akata Witch is a well-told, well-built story that follows a similar format to Harry Potter, but is not Harry Potter at all. Sunny is a female protagonist after my own heart (sensible enough without being too sensible for her age), and the lessons she learns in the novel are certainly lessons any girl - or any boy, for that matter - could stand to learn, no matter what their age. The novel itself is a pretty self-contained story, but there is definitely a promise for more at the end - no surprise, as this looks to be the first in a series. Hopefully Okorafor gets that next book out soon, because I really would like to read more about Sunny and her friends and see how they handle their next adventure.
This is a good reimagining of Harry Potter that stands out for its convincingly different cultural setting. While some may object to the comparison—arguing that shared tropes are inevitable—the story mirrors too many key beats from HP to feel entirely coincidental. That said, this is less a critique and more an observation, as the distinctive setting and cultural influences lend the narrative its own unique identity. However, these parallels can occasionally feel a bit distracting.
One aspect that gave me pause was the handling of violence. As in Binti, the consequences of violence and death seem surprisingly minimal, leaving little in the way of lasting impact. This feels especially incongruous given that, in the UK, the book has been retitled and marketed with a younger audience in mind—an odd choice, as the content and themes seem better suited to an older readership.
Overall, this is a solid fantasy and a quick read, though very much part of a continuing series, so don’t expect a neatly wrapped conclusion. While it has its merits, I am not sure if I’m compelled to continue with the series.