Aubrey Kachingwe
Aubrey Kachingwe is a Malawian novelist and journalist. He is best known for his 1965 novel No Easy Task, which was the first work by a Malawian author to be included in the Heinemann [African Writers Series]. Kachingwe also held positions
with broadcasters in Malawi, England and Ghana before moving into a career in business.
Background
Aubrey Kachingwe was born in Blantyre, Nyasaland, on 27 November 1926. He was educated in Malawi and Tanganyika and after his studies he pursued journalism, inspired by his uncle, Charles Wesley Mlanga, who was an editor at the local The Times newspaper. In 1950, he moved to Kenya and worked at the East African Standard in Nairobi before returning to Nyasaland in 1954 to work in public relations. The next year, he moved to London to study journalism and to work on the foreign affairs desk of the Daily Herald before returning to Nyasaland to work at the Department of Information and as a Reuters correspondent. In 1963, he returned to London to work as a radio journalist at the BBC African Service, before working for Ghana's national radio in Accra. Kachingwe returned home to become Head of News with the Malawi Broadcasting Corporation in the newly independent nation. In his later years, Kachingwe moved into business, rearing pigs and cattle on his farm and running a laundry. By 2011, he was frail and had lost interest in writing.Works
Aubrey Kachingwe began writing short stories, which appeared in the East African Standard and elsewhere, to supplement his income:Kachingwe's primary literary legacy rests on his only novel, No Easy Task. He submitted the manuscript via the Nyasaland Publications and Literature Bureau to Heinemann:
The manuscript was received a few months before independence, which was seen as timely, and was released in hardback at a launch on 24 January 1965 at the British Council in Zomba. The decision to initially release the novel in hardback, rather than as a cheaper paperback in the African Writers Series, limited sales with Heinemann representatives reporting in October 1965:
No Easy Task duly appeared as number 24 in the African Writers Series in 1966, a year before David Rubadiri’s No Bride Price and two years before Legson Kayira’s The Looming Shadow.
Set in the fictional British colony of Kwacha, the novel follows Jo Jozeni, a young journalist who navigates the mounting tensions of a nationalist movement. The work is often described as semi-autobiographical, reflecting Kachingwe's own professional trajectory from village life to international journalism.
Critical reception to the novel was mixed. Academic critics including Bardolph, Gikandi, Lindfors, Reed, and Roscoe largely praise its sober reporting and avoidance of stereotypes via the creation of nuanced characters, albeit with sometimes stilted dialogue or 'jerky newspeak'. Claude Wauthier, who interviewed Kachingwe in 1967, stresses Kachingwe efforts to portray the ambiguities of political power. A markedly different review was published by Paul Theroux in 1966. Theroux had served as a Peace Corps volunteer, but was expelled from Malawi in late 1965, and subsequently thrown out of the Peace Corps, for helping a political opponent of the newly elected Hastings Kamuzu Banda. In his scathing review, he calls the novel "disingenuous" and "fraudulent" for failing to document the political violence he witnessed in Malawi at the time.
By 1967 Kachingwe was reportedly working on a second novel titled Signs of the Gathering Storm regarding the Mau Mau rebellion, while the introduction to his 1968 short story, My Beautiful Fig, notes that it was to form part of a collection of short stories. Neither of these were ever published, while efforts to involve him in the Malawi Writers Group in the early 1970s were unsuccessful, as he was unsure of what the repercussions would be on his career.