In a David Dabydeen novel titled in reference to this character, Auntie Clarice reminds the narrator that “you is we” as he leaves to study in England. For 10 points each:
[10h] Identify this black-clothed character who is told that a man’s “end was in every way worthy of his life” in a scene set by the marble fireplace and sarcophagus-like piano of this character’s drawing-room.
ANSWER: the Intended [accept descriptions of Kurtz’s fiancée or betrothed; reject “Kurtz’s wife”]
[10e] Like David Dabydeen in The Intended, Arun Joshi reworked Heart of Darkness in a novel titled for Billy, a man with this surname. The Tulsis’ six-fingered son-in-law has this surname in a novel by V. S. Naipaul.
ANSWER: Biswas [accept The Strange Case of Billy Biswas or A House for Mr. Biswas]
[10m] Critics have analogized the Intended to both the unnamed “Darling” addressed in this novel’s “Love Letter” chapter and the protagonist’s German lover Marija. This novel by Ama Ata Aidoo (“ah-MAH-tah EYE-doo”) follows Sissie’s studies in Europe.
ANSWER: Our Sister Killjoy [or Our Sister Killjoy: or Reflections from a Black-eyed Squint]
<JB, World Literature>