Dambudzo Marechera

Dambudzo Marechera (4 June 1952 18 August 1987) was a Zimbabwean novelist, short story writer, playwright and poet. His short career produced a book of stories, two novels (one published posthumously), a book of plays, prose, and poetry, and a collection of poetry (also posthumous). His first book, a fiction collection entitled The House of Hunger (1978), won the Guardian Fiction Prize in 1979. Marechera was best known for his abrasive, heavily detailed and self-aware writing, which was considered a new frontier in African literature, and his unorthodox behaviour at the universities from which he was expelled despite excelling in his studies.

Dambudzo Marechera
Born
Charles William Marechera

(1952-06-04)4 June 1952
Rusape, Southern Rhodesia
Died18 August 1987(1987-08-18) (aged 35)
Harare, Zimbabwe
NationalityZimbabwean
Alma materUniversity of Rhodesia (now University of Zimbabwe),
University of Oxford
OccupationWriter
Notable workThe House of Hunger (1978), Black Sunlight (1980)
AwardsGuardian Fiction Prize (1979)
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