Book Review
Author: Eunice O. Obidi
Publishers: Kraft Books Limited
Pagination: 250
Reviewer: Banji Ojewale
When things fell apart for Okonkwo in Chinua Achebe’s Things Fall Apart, the world also broke into one thousand and one shards, never to return to the old stable order. But in Eunice Obidi’s Set Apart, the dissolution of family and its sacred values isn’t succeeded by unredeemed disintegration, disharmony and dispersions.
Rather, the author ushers in a Deus ex machina (God) Who reshuffles the narratives, scenes and personalities to set apart for His will those bitten, battered and bruised by society and its oddly arranged institutions. It’s a tale of ceaseless surprises and twists and turns, after which the burnt emerge from ashes to become the blessed.
Opening her novel with a home knocked down by
spousal feuding, Eunice Obidi introduces the protagonist, Funke Adejumobi, a
young undergraduate woman who can’t understand how old lovers, her parents,
have become strangers, with the husband, James, always the strayed predator
from the jungle. The girl ‘’wished she had been born into a different family
where domestic violence was non-existent.’’
If wishes were horses…
Divorce, having served notice through beatings
unleashed by James, is inevitable. When it arrives, Funke, an only child and
mother are shattered, especially the former.
Following the separation, Funke’s father
disappears from the book altogether. When he’s referenced, Funke tells everyone
she has never had a father; since his presence in her life is the presence of
pain and the absence of paternal love she feels entitled to. She gets the love
aplenty from the mother. But Mrs. Adejumobi dies, plunging the girl into new depths
of despondency.
At a point, she considers suicide, urged by a
‘’disembodied voice’’. She has forsaken the God Who could have counselled
against such a step. Although she’s revealed as knowing the Lord from an early
age, a concatenation of circumstances sets Funke on a journey away from God.
Her mother says: ‘’Funke, you used to be a very good lover of God when you were
younger. You were even the one who brought me to Christ. What’s happening to
you?’’
School grades dip with threatening academic
fatality. For some time she runs into good friends like Remi, Caroline,
Michael, Joshua etc. two of whom return her to Christianity and better school
performance. She’s also gifted the kindness of a Dr. Chuma, benign wife of a
pastor. Funke has a crush on her son, hoping for a marital consummation.
There’s record of a full-blown rebellion that
sees Funke branch from gospel to secular music. She loses recognition as she’s
sighted among drunkards and smokers, while honouring invitation to perform at
high-society gatherings in Ikoyi.
Once, on a trip to Lagos to be part of a gospel
programme, she’s kidnapped by ritualists along with others. Heaven uses Funke
to free them and to save souls, including one of the criminals. It occurs after
she’s wholly reconciled to God, Who now freely employs the Holy Spirit to give
Funke clear instructions in decision-taking.
The Lord does more than make Funke graduate: He
leads her to the bliss of marriage, the loss of which blights her parents’ and
shoves her to the brink of destruction.
But Heaven wouldn’t allow her to perish. Funke
is set apart, in the crumbled fragments around. She’s only allowed a brush with
them without harm.
Eunice Obidi’s Set Apart is a
proselytizing literary venture. It hoists the adventures of a woman and those
around her, kindred spirits and hostile ones, to teach that God is at work in
our lives, whether we accept or reject His reality. He forsakes none
ultimately, except those who maintain their recalcitrant stance to the end.
In her book, the young writer painstakingly
posts a prose that is both taut, elastic and adaptable. This free style,
perfected by great storytellers, enables Eunice Obidi to achieve a balance
between short, median and long sentences. She doesn’t trouble you with snaky
kilometre-long constructions; nor is she used to polysyllabic words. There’s,
in Set Apart, the primary task of relating a story. It shouldn’t be
hindered or slowed down by literary encumbrances.
Now, if you’re thrilled by her prose, you’d have
more in the dialogue scenes. Her powers soar in dialogue settings, such as we
behold on pages 105-7, 135-137 and 171. Her strength appears to diminish in
prose.
Should there be a revised edition in the future,
the author and publishers must address slips arising from misplaced or missing
quotation marks and lines uncompleted before flushing to other ones.
*Ojewale is a writer at Ota, Ogun State,
Nigeria.

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