René Philombe (born 1930, Ngaoundéré, Cameroon—died Oct. 25, 2001, Yaoundé) was an African novelist, poet, playwright, and journalist. The Cameroon Tribune called him “one of the most influential personalities in the new wave of creative writing in Cameroon.”
Philombe, a cultural and political activist from his teens, became a policeman in 1949. He unionized the police and became their union secretary in Douala. In the mid-1950s, after he was permanently crippled by spinal disease, he began writing seriously. His Lettres de ma cambuse (1964; Tales from My Hut, 1977), which he had written in 1957, won the Prix Mottard of the Académie Française. His other published works include Sola, ma chérie (1966; “Sola, My Darling”), a novel about seemingly unjust marriage customs; Un Sorcier blanc à Zangali (1970; “A White Sorcerer in Zangali”), a novel about the effect of a missionary’s clash with the colonial administration in a small village; Choc anti-choc (1978), “a novel made of poems”; and Africapolis (1978), a tragedy. The latter two are both thinly veiled allegories of life under a malevolent dictatorship.
In 1960 Philombe was a co-founder of the National Association of Cameroonian Poets and Writers, and he remained its general secretary until 1981. Many of his patriotic literary activities earned him long periods in prison, in spite of his infirmities. In 1981 he was once again released under house arrest, but all of his manuscripts were retained.