Month: July 2019

Why “Habari”?

Why “Habari”?

Why ‘Habari’?

Some readers may have noticed that Habari is the publishing name of my books and wonder what it means. Well, Habari is a Swahili word meaning news or information.

Swahili (also called Kiswahili) is one of the two official languages spoken in Kenya, English being the other. Apart from these two languages, there are forty-two ethnic groups of Kenyans who have their own dialects, so both Swahili and English are second languages to most of the inhabitants of the country.

The English language was inherited from Kenya’s British colonial past and is the language of choice in business, academics, and social set-ups in Kenya. Swahili is the national language and is a unifying African language spoken by nearly 100 percent of the Kenyan population.

The purest form of Kiswahili is spoken along the coast where native Swahili people live. It is very complicated in its structure and is considered to be a Bantu language. The up-country Swahili tends to be more colloquial, and this was the Swahili the settlers learned in the early days when they came out to develop Britain’s colony of Kenya.

After being away from your farm, business or house for any length of time, leaving it in the tender care of whomever you had employed for the job, the first question after greeting that said person would be: ‘Ni habari gani?’ (What’s the news?).

Now, in the African culture it would be incredibly rude to launch into all the misfortunes that had occurred whilst you had been away, so inevitably the answer would come back – ‘Oh, everything’s fine, absolutely fine, no problems at all.’ Then there would be a slight pause and the dreaded word you were waiting for would be spoken: ‘Lakini’. Lakini means ‘but’ in English, and after it was said you would hear that your prize bull had died after being bitten by a snake, your dogs had been fighting, the cat hadn’t been seen for days, and the office had been broken into! That was the sort of habari you really did not want to hear!


Find out more about my latest book by reading a preview HERE. It’s on sale on Amazon–check out the two links below:

KINDLE

PAPERBACK

Posted by Janet Green in Reading and Writing, 0 comments

How I Develop My Characters. . .

How I Develop My Characters. . .

A stock image we used for the cover to depict Lucy. She seems delicate, very feminine, and is a good visual fit for my main character.

In every novel there is a protagonist and a number of other personalities to bring the tale to life. No matter what the story is about, it is always the characters acting out the dramas within the pages that will enliven and stimulate the narrative, and make it an attention-grabbing or thought-provoking read.

As an author I have the delightful task of creating characters and fashioning them into the individuals to be written into my book. There are varieties of ways in which to do this and often my characters are based on people I’ve come across in life.

I love to covertly observe people. I’ve found that every one of them is unique and distinctive, and the way they conduct their lives may delight, disgust, puzzle or amuse me. The saying, “There’s nowt so queer as folk” often comes to mind! But these observations provide me with a huge anthology of differing human characteristics that I can use to fashion the individuals in my story.

When preparing to write a book, I have in mind the principal characters; I know what they look like and I know a little about their personalities, but not a lot more. It is only during the writing of the story that I get to know them really well and they can surprise me!

It’s a funny thing, but I think other authors would agree, as you proceed with the writing of your book the people who make up the story come alive and take on their own individual characteristics and personalities–and these may differ from what you had originally intended. The deeper you get into the narrative, the more intimately you get to know the people you’re writing about. It’s a process that takes place naturally without you giving it too much thought, and yes, sometimes they seem to take you in a different direction than the one you had originally determined!


Find out more about my latest book by reading a preview HERE. It’s on sale on Amazon–check out the two links below:

KINDLE

PAPERBACK

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