Feb 9, 2025 12:54 PM
This novel turns many conventions on its head. The first and most obvious is the setting. Rather than the typical medieval setting of a fantasy novel, Marlon James aims to jettison this for a fictionalized, uncolonized sub-Saharan Africa. James sculpts his world well; African mythological creatures abound, traditional folklore beliefs and magic are given a reality in the novel, and the cultures in the world range from tribal to urban and stratified.
The main character, Tracker, kills his abusive father and leaves his home to go live with his uncles in a neighboring village where he learns that his father is actually his grandfather, and his real father is dead. He then leaves this village as well after declining to go through with a circumcision ritual to enter into manhood. (His tribe's belief is that when cutting off the foreskin you are cutting out the womanly part of you, and in females removing a clitoridectomy is cutting out the male portion).
There's a lot of rejection of heteronormativity right here in the outset. Any male-female relations that are presented are incestuous, polygynous, or abusive. For now it's understandable that Tracker would reject these societal structures given their disfunctions. Tracker then meets a shapeshifting leopard man and they both take a bunch of misshapen children called mingi to live with a maternal shaman. This motley gathering of outcasts is the closest Tracker gets to a functional family structure, but the village is attacked, and the children have to go live with a neighboring tribe that has a blood feud with Tracker, so Tracker can't stay there with them and leaves to travel the world.
The rest of the novel is focused on the forayed search for a missing prince. As the dysfunctional details of the royal family and state-structure are revealed, readers should note thematic parallels between that disfunction and Tracker's own origins. Ultimately, this quest narrative is brought back to Tracker's homeland to conclude both threads. Tracker is again presented with a circumcision ritual into manhood and rejects it, not wanting to cut the "female part" of him off. More peregrinations ensue.
While the most straightforward part of the book, I found this adventure throughout the world to be the most nauseating. There is constant jaunting back to locales previously visited. The description of action and violence is flat. Gratuitous and frequent, but flat. All the romance scenes in the book are super gay so they don't resonate emotionally with me at all, but objectively I feel like they lend little to the overarching structure. Quite frankly, the female shapeshifting hyena pack anally gangraping the main character with their pseudopenises and then sucking out his eyeball did more thematic and narrative lifting than all the dressed up faggotry.