Title: The Icarus girl
Author: Helen Oyeyemi
Genre: Fiction/Magical Realism
Publishers: Anchor Books
Pages: 334
Year: 2005
Country: Nigeria
In 2002, when I was still in secondary school, I read a
magazine article about a young Nigerian girl called Helen Oyeyemi who had
written a critically acclaimed first novel manuscript at the tender age of 18!
I was blown away with amazement. It had not even been published yet and it was
already being labeled “critically acclaimed!” Of course, I instantly felt like
reading it. The book was published to best seller success and wide global
acclaim which launched Helen to literary fame. (She received positive reviews
from the Oprah magazine, the Washington post book world, The Sunday Telegraph, Financial
times, Essence etc.) I didn’t even bother looking for it in our Sahara-like
Cameroonian bookshops. Years later, I’ve now read it after a very special book
request from a big brother in the US who sent it to me. I also intentionally
read it immediately after reading Ben Okri’s Booker prize winning novel, “The
Famished Road.” And what a wise decision I made because both novels which are
written by two Nigerians of Yoruba extraction, belong to the same genre and are
a little bit similar. But Helen’s work is startlingly original and has a totally
different angle from Okri’s.
Unlike “The Famished Road” which is inspired by Nigerian
mythology, set only in Nigeria and capitalizes on the belief of the African,
“The Icarus girl” is set in both London and Nigeria (Ibadan). It transcends the
belief of the African and that of the European to the culture contrast between
them. It is also inspired by both Nigerian mythology (Yoruba tradition) and
Greek mythology. The title of the book itself stems from Greek mythology, from
the legend of Icarus. Icarus was the son of Daedalus and they had been
imprisoned in King Minos’ labyrinth in the island of Crete. Daedalus fashions
wings partly made of wax for Icarus and himself so they could escape. As they
fly away, Daedalus warns Icarus not to fly too close to the sun, but he
disobeys his father. When the sun melts the wax on his wings, Icarus plunges
into the Aegean sea and drowns. Another synonym for the name/word “Icarus” is
“mythical being,” so I could break down the title of the novel to “The mythical
girl.” Nothing about Icarus’ story is mentioned in the book, I’ve simply been
an ardent lover of the Greek mythological stories since my childhood.
“The Icarus girl” is written in the third person narrative unlike “The famished Road’s” first person. The story is about a sentient, gloomy child, an 8-year-old biracial girl called Jessamy Harrison (or Jess for short) born to an English father, Daniel Harrison and a Nigerian Yoruba mother, Sarah who is a novelist. Jess possesses an extraordinary imagination and is really intelligent but also weird, really odd; she unexpectedly screams in a high pitched voice at home/school sometimes for no reason, she hides in cupboards, she has no friends so she has a hard time fitting in at school. And when her Year Five mates come to tease her, she bites one of them with her teeth!
And If Jess is weird then the only girl she befriends on a
visit to her mother’s homeland, Nigeria (Bodija house, Ibandan) is even weirder
and weirdest. She’s a ragged little Nigerian girl about Jess’ age called
Titiola, but since Jess couldn’t quite pronounce the Yoruba name, “Titiola,” she
called her Tilly Tilly. Tilly Tilly seems likeable to Jess at once because they
read and appreciate poetry, have a nice conversation and go to the Amusement
park together; they click. But she’s got oddities and even mystery about her
right from the start. Tilly Tilly’s got almost pupil less eyes, is very shy and
lives alone in the deserted Boys quarters of Jess’ grandfather, Gbenga’s house
with no parents. She mimics Jess’ voice exactly, she opens closed doors simply
by pushing them, she knows about poetry even without reading it. In fact, she
seems to have an apparent knowledge about everything. She seems to have the
ability to do anything; she appears, disappears, (she even later makes jess
invisible) and when Jess returns to London, she pays Jess a visit shortly after
and tells her their family just moved to London too. Of course, Jess enjoys the
magical acts and when she asks Tilly Tilly how she does all that, Tilly who has
a bad temper gets angry and doesn’t tell her, so Jess lets her be. Jess also realizes
that she is the only person who can “see” Tilly Tilly. She is invisible to
everybody else except Jess, so Tilly Tilly is actually “The “mythical being”
girl,” thus the book’s title…The Icarus girl.” This is just like “The Famished
Road’s” abiku main character, Azaro
who is the only one who “sees” mythical beings and ghosts. It is also like the
wizards in the “Harry Potter series” who “see” Hogwarts when the muggles can’t.
Jess seeks revenge on her enemies through magical Tilly Tilly
by tormenting them, “let’s get her,” a sort of way to cause havoc on people and
send them into a bad trance. But as Tilly Tilly gets more violent, (destroying
Sarah’s computer which contained her literary work, bathroom mirror) with the
blame naturally falling on Jess because nobody can see Tilly Tilly, Jess starts
asking many questions but bad tempered Tilly Tilly doesn’t give her any answers.
Jess realizes she doesn’t actually know her ‘friend’ at all. Tilly Tilly tells
her that she, Jess once had a twin sister, Fern, who had died when they were
babies. So Jess asks her mother about it. Sarah gets startled since she had
never told Jess about Fern, tells Daniel that Jess is an abiku (spirit child) and communicates to her father in Nigeria,
Gbenga wondering why they had not done Fern’s Ibeji carving back in Nigeria. Oyeyemi delves into Yoruba mythology
about the belief of twins. They belong to three worlds; the physical world,
spirit world and the bush (wilderness.) If one twin died, the family would make
a carving to Ibeji, the god of twins
so that the other twin would be happy. It was the carving of the grown up
version of the dead twin which was done for the sake of appeasement, so that
its spirit would not torment the living one if it was angry that the other twin
was still alive.
Tilly Tilly assures Jess that she is actually her good friend
and other sort of spiritual twin but Jess begins to reproach her and Tilly
Tilly’s visits become increasingly haunting as Jess also faces cultural
dislocation. Sarah’s proposal to see a psychologist, Dr Mckenzie proves futile.
He thinks Jess has got an internalized imaginary companion or alter ego which
spurs Jess to become so uncooperative with him but Jess makes a true friend,
Shivs, Dr Mckenzie’s daughter. Tilly Tilly “gets” Jess’ father and “gets” Shivs
(she never liked Shivs from the start) then proceeded to demand a body in the
physical world to inhabit; Jess’ body, so she ‘enters’ into Jess and assumes
her body for short periods. Before her ninth birthday, the Harrison family
travel to Nigeria again and the Ibeji carving
is done but Jess is no more. Tilly Tilly gets into her body completely and a
previously non Yoruba speaking Jess all of a sudden starts speaking fluent Yoruba.
Only Jess’ grandfather understands what is going on and decides to take ‘Jess’
to a witchdoctor leading to a remarkable culture clash with Jess’ English
father who refuses. Sarah’s effort to escape the hostile argument with her
daughter to Lagos leads to an accident and ‘Jess’ is injured and unconscious.
Gbenga places the Ibeji carving near her
hospital bed and Jess’ spirit trapped in the wilderness has to fight her way
back into her body with Fern’s help in a breathtaking finale.
Oyeyemi’s beautifully crafted and lyrically executed story sparkles
with a remarkable unpredictable plot and very brilliant language. Her voice is
soft, very lyrical and childlike; very playful in this book, a “not-so-serious”
voice and way of telling her story. She has a refreshing sense of humour too for
the book really had me laughing sometimes. But it also had this feature of going
very dark and grim. There are also a handful of themes in the novel; the classic
literary theme of doubles (both real and spiritual), self-identity, poetry/prose
writing, redemption, revenge, psychological pursuit, nonchalance towards
Religion, cultural dislocation, culture clash etc But the theme of poverty
which is central in “The Famished Road” is conspicuously absent in this book. Don’t
get me wrong though, I strongly feel Ben Okri’s novel is better than this one and he
is a genius writer. Yet I enjoyed “The Icarus girl” more than “The Famished
Road.” I had a love-hate feeling for Okri’s work but a love-love feeling for
Oyeyemi’s work. To conclude, I would say it is recommended reading for magical
realism/surrealism fans. Forget the age at which she wrote it. “The Icarus
girl” impressed me more than some books I’ve read from a couple of
fifty-year-olds. And I would be very honest to say I’m in my mid twenties but I
haven’t written anything yet which is better than what she wrote in her debut
novel at eighteen.
About the author: Helen Oyeyemi was born in Nigeria
in 1984 and moved to London at the age of four. She completed “The Icarus girl”
just before her nineteenth birthday while diligently studying for her A-level
exams. She is a member of the class of 2006 at Cambridge University, where she
studied social and political sciences. She has written and published three
other novels after “The Icarus girl.”