The Narrow Path (novel)

The Narrow Path: An African Childhood is a 1966 autobiographical novel by Ghanaian novelist Francis Selormey.

The novel heavily focuses on recounting the unhappy and painful experiences of a child, Kofi, attending a Catholic mission school in Ghana, and the contrasting traditional education he receives.

[1][2] The novel, that has many of the developmental features of a bildungsroman, but utilizes an adult narrator to observe the development of the child focal character, Kofi.

[2] Critic Chris Kwame Awuyah compared the novels themes and structure to Joseph Abruquah's The Torrent (1968) and Amu Djoleto's The Strange Man (1967) and notes similarities to other novels like James T. Farrell's Father and Son and Ngugi Wa Thiag'o's Weep not, Child.

[1] Awuyah said that the "major artistic strengths of [the novel] are its direct and concrete language presented with an unreflective and confessional narrative voice".