
Tamar was born and raised in the Belgian Congo – now the Congo – to a missionary family. And to hear her tell of her youth is to listen to a master storyteller. The crowd at Bouchercon lapped up her tales of wild animals and wilder tribesmen.
At Bouchercon, Tamar’s latest book was released, The Witch Doctor’s Wife. I was fortunate to get one of the few copies available. It turns out that when I asked Tamar to sign the book for me, she exclaimed that it was the first time she had seen the book. Needless to say my copy of the book is appropriately inscribed.
The book is charming. It tells the story of a young American woman, Amanda, who lands up in a mining town in the middle of the country. Her goal is to run a guest house used by missionaries. She moves into the house recently vacated by the previous missionaries – a house that comes with a housekeeper - who happens to be a man. “Most housekeepers here are men. The women are too busy raising their children and working in the fields. Fieldwork, that is women’s work.” So says the local head of police, Pierre Jardin.
The housekeeper’s name is Protruding Navel, and he dispenses African wisdom in a way that constantly clashes with Amanda’s feminist and social sensibilities. “Nor should you call me mukelenge. To address me with such respect will fill my foolish native head with too much pride. How then will I remember my station in life?”
The local witch doctor, whose name is Their Death, has two wives. The second, called Cripple for obvious reasons, shows up at Amanda’s house one day and persuades the bewildered Amanda to hire her as her assistant. During the conversation in which Amanda deplores the name given to Cripple, she is given her own descriptive name – Ugly Eyes – apparently Tamar’s nickname when she was in the Congo, because of her blue eyes.
The book is an easy read, filled with delightful and often very funny clashes of culture, not only between the Blacks and Whites, particularly Amanda, but also between some of the Whites. It provides glimpses into a part of the world that is not well known, where cultural norms would typically shock most Westerners, especially Americans.
I recommend it highly.
Stan - Thursday