Segu, as well as its sequel,
The Children of Segu, received positive review coverage. The
New York Times regarded the novel as "the most significant novel about black Africa published in many a year." American writer
Paule Marshall praised the novel, saying: "With the dazzling storytelling skills of an African
griot, Condé has written a rich, fast-paced saga of a great kingdom during the tumultuous period of the slave trade and the coming of Islam.
Segu is history as vivid and immediate as today. It has restored a part of my past that has long been missing." Novelist
Louise Meriwether commented: "
Segu is an overwhelming accomplishment. It injects into the density of history characters who are as alive as you and I. Passionate, lusty, greedy, they are in conflict with themselves as well as with God and Mammon. Condé has done us all a tremendous service by rendering a history so compelling and exciting.
Segu is a literary masterpiece I could not put down." ==References==