"Tackling the difficult and urgent issue of wars in Africa and their representation by insider-authors, Coundouriotis's text will provoke debate and raise interest in a rich but still under-researched field of study by means of wide ranging, trenchant analyses." -- -Annie Gagiano Professor Emeritus, Stellenbosch University "In powerful readings of a vast literature of war in Africa, with impeccable scholarship and painstaking attention to historical detail, Eleni Coundouriotis has reconstructed a history of the African novel from below, a history that puts "the people" and their political and literary claims of rights to representation--both in the postcolonial state and its national literature--at the center of the story. The book adds vital new perspectives on the interdependent developments of humanitarian thinking and Naturalism, adding necessary nuance to our understanding of the relationships among literature, human rights, and humanitarianism." -- -Joseph R. Slaughter Columbia University "Eleni Coundouriotis's latest book so exudes theoretical newness that one reads even the bibliography with pencil at the ready." -African Affairs "The People's Right to the Novel combines a clear thesis with a painstaking and perceptive discussion of the individual authors and their works." -- -Wendy Griswold Northwestern University