Black Leopard, Red Wolf by Marlon James

Black Leopard, Red Wolf (Dark Star Trilogy, #1)

by Marlon James

SHORTLISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD IN FICTION

The Sunday Times number 1 Bestseller and A New York Times Bestseller

'Black Leopard, Red Wolf is the kind of novel I never realized I was missing until I read it. A dangerous, hallucinatory, ancient Africa, which becomes a fantasy world as well realized as anything Tolkien made, with language as powerful as Angela Carter's. It's as deep and crafty as Gene Wolfe, bloodier than Robert E. Howard, and all Marlon James. It's something very new that feels old, in the best way. I cannot wait for the next instalment' -Neil Gaiman

'The child is dead. There is nothing left to know.'

Tracker is a hunter, known in the thirteen kingdoms as one who has a nose - and he always works alone. But he breaks this rule when he joins a band seeking a lost child. His companions are strange and dangerous, from a giant to a witch to a shape-shifting Leopard, and each hides their own secrets.

As they follow the boy's scent from perfumed citadels to infested rivers to enchanted darklands, set upon by murderous foes, Tracker wonders: who really is this mysterious boy? Why don't people want him found? And, crucially, who is telling the truth and who is lying?

Black Leopard, Red Wolf is the first novel in Marlon James's Dark Star Trilogy.

'A game-changing modern fantasy classic.' Financial Times

'Complex, lyrical, moving and furiously gripping... This new book will propel James into a new galaxy of literary stardom.' Observer

'To call this novel original doesn't do [it] justice... James has thrown African cultures, mythologies, religions, histories, world-views and topographies into the mighty cauldron of his imagination to create a work of literary magic.' New Statesman

Reviewed by moraa on

5 of 5 stars

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“He is my friend.”
“Nobody ever gets betrayed by their enemy.”


ALL THE FREAKING STARS TO THIS because y’all could never. whew, child! I might need a drink for this one!

*rolls up sleeves*
*takes a sip of strong tea*

If you’ve not read this book, you need to read it and I’m going to attempt to tell you why (using many, many – but somehow not enough – words). So strap in and get comfortable!

also, this will be a spoiler-free review so proceed with wild abandon

CHARACTERS
-there were so many to choose from but I decided to limit myself to these five:

1. Tracker
-he’s funny, no really. He has a talent for banter that had me curled up in a ball saying “no more please!” as my family considered taking me to see one of the Sangomas and have bad spirits cast out.
(no they didn’t but it would been quite the conversation)
-his character arc is more than entertaining to watch play out, it’s believable – enough to make me forget he’s only a bunch of words on a page. I enjoyed watching him struggle not just with himself and his past but his place in the grander scheme of things.
-and though he’s by no means ‘lively’ in the strict sense, I swear to you he’s brimming with life.

2. Leopard
-everything you’d want in a ‘wild and free’ character
-you can always count on him to lighten the mood (and stir up trouble every now and then)
-his friendship with Tracker is one of the greatest things about this book (full circle baby!)

3. Sogolon
-I was so-so about her until I discovered her true motives
-a certified bad-ass (debate your mother please)
-also, she tolerates zero bullshit at all from men and her ability to constantly put most of them in their place is nothing short of admirable (and entertaining).

4. Mingi
-this is not one person but a category of people (won’t say anything else because: spoilers)
-these are like my little babies
-I love you all more than I can ever say
-I need to see more Mingi in books 2 and 3
(actually, I just need to see books 2 and 3 period).

5. Sadogo
-Sadogo is everything that is sorrowful and mournful in this book (not quite but bear with my melodrama a little more)
-I enjoyed learning about him from the get-go and wading into his backstory didn’t change that at all
-don’t listen to them, Sadogo, you’re the shit!

WORLD-BUILDING
-it goes without saying this is African-inspired fantasy and the senses were tingling (in a good way) the deeper I got sucked into this world. Marlon James is not the first to write African fantasy and he is not the only to be doing it as we speak but as I read this I felt something profound, a sense of belonging and I said to myself “these are my people in a genre I love so much”
-places I’d love to visit:

1. Gangatom
-I think these are a people (a river tribe) and not a place but I’d like to visit their forest nonetheless. I want to sing and dance when night falls, and fight and sing and dance again. I want to put on Hemba masks and lose myself to the sound of drums in the cold night wind.

2. Malakal
-ahh, this land, home of the mad King of the North, that no one conquered because they dared not try. A land where most men and women are warriors, in a city built by thieves, that scrapes the skies.

3. Mitu
-who wouldn’t want to visit the city where men have put down arms to ponder questions of earth and sky? Here are your fertile grasslands and that baobab tree (that tree of sorrows). Here you live in proximity to the Darklands, here you live with demons on your doorstep.

4. Dolingo
-the land where their skin is dark enough to be blue, where trees are as tall as the world itself and pillars are covered in gold. The queen sits in the citadel at the very top surrounded by courtiers who bow to her every whim without question.

WRITING STYLE
-Black Leopard, Red Wolf is a frame-story which basically means we have a story within a story. Both narratives lead to finding out the main question which is: what happened to the boy?
-there’s not much else to say about Marlon James’ writing except that coupled with the characters he created, it only draws you in even more.
-have I mentioned the banter?

PLOT & THEME
-The story is more character driven (as I mentioned above) but the plot serves the story well and I have no complaints here.
-just a few themes I enjoyed watching come to fruition:
1. Friendship
-Tracker and Leopard carried this one (and I loved it)
2. Survival
3. Suffering and isolation
4. Deception
5. Revenge
6. Self-acceptance

MAGIC SYSTEM
-not exactly hard-core (in terms of actual 'practice' of magic) but please meet all these wonderful (and some slightly horrifying) magical characters/creatures
1. The Sangoma
2. Witches
3. Mingi
4. Shape shifters
5. Asanbosam
6. The Ogos
7. White Scientists
8. Shadowings
9. The Godbutcher

(and these are just the ones I marked down!)

Not everything the eye sees should be spoken by the mouth.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 13 August, 2020: Finished reading
  • 13 August, 2020: Reviewed