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The Hundred Wells of Salaga

The Hundred Wells of Salaga by Ayesha Haruna Attah




Bright, bold, and brilliantly African.

Let's start with the obvious: That book cover? Fantastic. I love it! It's a visual stunner. And Attah delivers, page after immersive page. I couldn't put it down. The Hundred Wells of Salaga is the kind of book you swallow in one gulp.

Writing style

Told from alternating points of view, The Hundred Wells of Salaga opens with a quiet sureness, a plain, unpretentious statement of facts.

There's no flowery preamble, no unnecessary dramatics. Just bold, candid storytelling that builds steadily into a rich, layered portrait of power, pain, and womanhood.

The alternating voices of Wurche, a princess with political ambitions, and Aminah, a young girl ripped from her peaceful life and sold into slavery, create brilliant tension. Princess and prisoner, slave and enslaved, their intertwined journeys echo the duality explored in Yaa Gyasi's Homegoing, but Attah's voice is distinct and refreshingly grounded in Ghanaian soil.

Themes

Attah doesn't slow down to explain African concepts, customs, or beliefs. There are no footnotes guiding you gently along. She writes as though you already know or that you should know. And that's precisely what makes it so powerful.

Much like in Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi's The First Woman, you are expected to enter the world on your own terms. The result is intimacy, authenticity, and no watered-down explanations for the outsider gaze.

Best of all, white people aren't central. They are present, yes, as history requires, but they are extras, not architects. The focus is exactly where it should be: on the complex, deeply human dynamics within African societies themselves.

Attah doesn't shy away from the uncomfortable truth of Africa's role in its systems of slavery before it became industrialized by foreign powers. This is a story about what slavery looked like before it was commercialized, commodified, and exported across oceans. The wells of Salaga — literal and metaphorical — become a haunting backdrop to a time when war, politics, and profit intersected with lives and legacies.

And let's not forget the magnificent portrayal of African women — educated, strategic, multilingual, politically astute, mothers, merchants, and griots. These aren't tokenized "strong female characters." These are women who lived, led, resisted, and negotiated survival and power in every form available to them.

Set in the 18th to 19th century in what is now northern Ghana, this story feels personal, not just historical. You can tell there's something deeply at stake for the author — a reclamation, perhaps, or a redemptive return to stories too often told by others, or not told at all.

And yes, I'll say it, this is a complete redemption for Ayesha Harruna Attah from Harmattan Rain. Faultless writing. Engaging plot. Historical accuracy. And, a map!

The Hundred Wells of Salaga is an unapologetic African story that neither begs nor explains. Just tells it like it is and tells it beautifully.

Final thoughts

Kudos, Madame. Kudos. For daring to tell a story rooted in uncomfortable truths, wrapped in luminous prose, and anchored in an African lens unapologetically.

For writing women who are not just symbols, but strategists, survivors, and shapers of history.

For giving us Wurche and Aminah two sides of the same storm and letting them be messy, complex, and real.

For showing that our stories don't need translation to be powerful.

Attah didn't just write a book. She reclaimed a narrative. If you haven't read The Hundred Wells of Salaga yet, this is a sign to do so, then come back and sit with all the questions it poses.


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