Interview with Njeri Wangari, author of Mines & Mind Fields:My Spoken Words

Written by Faith Oneya 

Njeri Wangari during a performance. PHOTO BY JULIAN MANJAHI NJOROGE

 

Above : Njeri Wangari in a past performance

1. Tell me about your book. How did you come up with the  ideas behind the poems?

All the poems were written over a period of 5 years( or more). I would say they were my first attempts and expressing who I am, confusion about my identity in this life and the space I occupy as a lady, as a poet, as one living in an urban area, one who looks longingly at her past skeptical about the present and future.

Thus the book has different poems exploring all these themes; identity, faith, culture, urban living, politics, beauty, music etc.

2. How did you get interested in writing this particular genre?

I have always preferred writing poetry as its short and precise. I do not have the patience of a novelist.

Do you recall how your interest in writing originated?

The memory evades me as I started off quite unsure of what I was doing and then finally realizing that the ‘stories/ramblings’ am writing were getting some attention.

3. What kind of research did you do for this book?

None. I am just quite observant of the things around me. For example, I just observed hawkers being chase around by Kanjo one day. Another day a bitter exchange between one hawker woman and a pedestrian then right there, a poem hit me. It became ‘Maisha ya Hawker’

4. What’s a typical working day like for you? When and where do you write?

I wake up, go to work (yes I have an 8 to 5 job) hussle with traffic to get home, retire to bed by 10.pm. I don’t have a specific time or room that I retreat to to write. My muse can come to me anytime anywhere. I remember the poem ‘When Change Comes’ came to me while I was waiting in a Matatu for it to fill up somewhere in Donholm. I wrote it on my phone(the draft ie) and later transferred it that evening.

Do you set a daily writing goal?

I tried and failed miserably. I have even tried purposing to a poem using words starting with different letters of the alphabet but it didn’t work.

My poetry comes to me. If I look for it, chances are, I won’t find it.

5. What is the hardest part of writing for you?

editing my poem afterwards. I always feel like its a masterpiece the way I wrote it first. but we all know, that is the heart talking. I have since learnt to give it a few days before sharing it on my blog or performing it.

6. What’s the best thing about being an author?

Meeting those who consume your work. when a fan comes up to you and says “I loved that Poem, I have gone through that or I felt encouraged etc” its the best feeling ever.

7. What are you working on now? Can you share a little of your current work with us?

I am currently working on poems on my 8-4-4 experience, can’t share yet as I haven’t edited. Look out for it though.

 8. What advice would you give aspiring writers?

Follow your heart. I know it sounds cliche but don’t writes because thats what people love hearing or its the in-thing or because you want people to perceive you in a certain way. I have written Poetry that made some fans brand me as a ‘Feminist’ I didn’t care. I have written poetry taking different personas but they don’t define who I am.

When you understand that, you can write about anything.

9. Do you have any favorite authors or favorite books? If, so, which ones?

Those keep changing. I am currently reading Ben Okri’s The Famished Road. I am absolutely loving the guys use of imagination, language. His writing is simply beautiful. the book is pure poetry.

Langston Hughes is one of my all time favorite poets. Maya Angelou was my first inspiration into poetry.

  10. What question have you always wanted to be asked as a writer/poet?

Are poets born or taught?

The book is also available on Amazon

Read the book review here: https://literarychronicles.wordpress.com/2011/12/05/book-review-mines-mind-fields-my-spoken-words/

Author: Faith Oneya

Lover of the written and spoken word.

3 thoughts on “Interview with Njeri Wangari, author of Mines & Mind Fields:My Spoken Words”

    1. Hi. I have just read your message now. I will take it down. Had the photo been captioned, I would have acknowledged the photographer as expected. I do not, in any way, condone plagiarism. The image was taken from her site.

Tell me what you think...