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Zambian Text

October 2005

Fiction

176 pages, 51/2 x 81/2

978-0-86554-970-8

$22.00t, Cloth

MUP/H690

Zambian Text
Stories from Ngambe Mission

Morris Smith

A collection about finding home--and yourself--halfway around the world

During its long history, Ngambe Hospital Mission on the Zambezi River has hosted missionaries of all kinds--dedicated French nuns in long habits, hard-working English doctors, efficient German nurses. A few were not so diligent. In the 1920s, a Swiss physician spent one day at the mission, declared the heat unbearable, and left. Yet ten years later, an Italian doctor, a woman, arrived and stayed eighteen years, mostly subsisting on fish from the river and cornbread mush called nshima, the same diet as the villagers, members of the Lozi tribe.

Skip to the mid-nineties, the time of these stories. The Ngambe villagers are now Zambians, and still of the Lozi tribe. The missionaries--mostly British or American--tend to come and go, rather than staying until their tombstones are erected in the mission cemetery as did their predecessors. Despite these changes, they, like their earlier counterparts, have come with an earnest desire to do good works. And they, probably like the French nuns and German nurses, find that getting along with each other is often harder than giving vaccinations or leading a prayer.

Besides doing their jobs, the missionaries have a chance to pick up some Lozi words, to learn the traditions, and ride in a dugout on the Zambezi, the river Dr. Livingstone once navigated. They might visit a game park, home to thousands of elephants and other wild things. They might travel to Lusaka, Zambia’s capital, see how the government works, but even if a missionary fails to absorb the culture, another possibility exists--in this remote setting he may learn something new and startling about himself.

Morris Smith
lives in Valdosta, Georgia. She studied at Valdosta State University and Tulane University and has worked as both a teacher and a social worker. In 1998, she was a nominee for Georgia Author of the Year for a short story sequence, Spencer Road (University of Tennessee Press).

Titles of Related Interest

Discovering the World: Thirteen Stories

Lake Moon: A Novel

The Twelfth Year, and Other Times

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