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Scott Simon talks with NoViolet Bulawayo about her new novel "Glory," based on the 2017 coup that ousted Zimbabwe's long-time president Robert Mugabe. "Glory" is a novel openly inspired by Orwell ...
On Nov. 14, 2017, novelist NoViolet Bulawayo woke up to the news that Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s ruler for nearly four decades, had been deposed in a coup. Bulawayo, 40, was at home in Oakland ...
BULAWAYO’S efforts to end new HIV infections in the city should be sustained as the city is not yet out of the woods despite surpassing the 95-95-95 targets, stakeholders have said.
In Bulawayo's steady hands, what could be a tale of woe becomes a story of resilience. Even as the government sends in bulldozers to "clear" the shantytowns, the adults of Paradise go out to vote.
Zimbabwean-born NoViolet Bulawayo is the first black African female to be on the Man Booker prize shortlist for her novel "We Need New Names." An interview with the author.
THE Bulawayo State House has virtually been abandoned since President Robert Mugabe hardly uses the property when he visits the country's second city. Built on vast woodlands next to the fast ...
Bulawayo, also known as the City of Kings because of its rich past as the home of the ancient Rozvi, Torwa and Ndebele kingdoms, is no longer a place fit for a king.
Bulawayo may for instance focus on promoting tourism, light manufacturing, assembly and light assembly of products instead of attempting to produce commodities which are produced elsewhere using ...
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