In this deeply hopeful and viscerally detailed novel, award-winning Haitian author Louis-Philippe Dalembert has provided a Tolstoyan narrative of the contemporary immigrants' exodus from war, famine, poverty, criminality and injustice to a better life across the Mediterranean Sea. Following in intimate detail the lives of three women from disparate religions and cultures, and nations--Nigeria, Somalia, and Syria--Dalembert compassionately depicts these three women and the bond they form together in their mutual struggle to escape to Europe via an overcrowded, dilapidated boat across the sea, the metaphorical wall between their former lives and the future.
Certain to appeal to readers of literature of migration and such
recent fiction as "Behold the Dreamers" and "The Lost Children
Archive."
In this deeply hopeful and viscerally detailed novel, award-winning Haitian author Louis-Philippe Dalembert has provided a Tolstoyan narrative of the contemporary immigrants' exodus from war, famine, poverty, criminality and injustice to a better life across the Mediterranean Sea. Following in intimate detail the lives of three women from disparate religions and cultures, and nations--Nigeria, Somalia, and Syria--Dalembert compassionately depicts these three women and the bond they form together in their mutual struggle to escape to Europe via an overcrowded, dilapidated boat across the sea, the metaphorical wall between their former lives and the future.
Certain to appeal to readers of literature of migration and such
recent fiction as "Behold the Dreamers" and "The Lost Children
Archive."