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"You are not your mother's first daughter. There was one before you. And in my village we have a saying about separated sisters. They are like a woman and her reflection, doomed to stay on opposite sides of the pond."
This book is amazing, it's unlike anything I've read before. It is both intimate and sweeping (I stole that from a blurb on the back cover, but it's so true). This gets ALL THE STARS!!!.
This is a multi-generational family saga that follows the form of that old ditty: For want of ...more

The story of Homegoing begins in Ghana during the height of the slave trade. The book follows the stories of two half sisters and their descendants through seven generations. One sister is sold into slavery and sent to the American South, and the other sister remains in Ghana where she is married to a British slaver. Each chapter tells the story of a different generation, alternating between the family in Ghana and the one in the United States. The book tackles some pretty big issues: the slave
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Rave reviews drove my bookclub to pick this, and unfortunately, all seven of us found it a disappointment. Setting out to explore the reality and then legacy of the transatlantic slave trade is an ambitious task for a first novel, and the framework employed proved to be more of a weakness than a strength for me and my fellow readers.
Starting in the 1750s or 60s, the book follows two half-sisters and their descendants across six generations, from the Gold Coast to America and back. The major prob ...more
Starting in the 1750s or 60s, the book follows two half-sisters and their descendants across six generations, from the Gold Coast to America and back. The major prob ...more

I picked up this book because the characters intertwined with some of my life story (years spent in Ghana, Mississippi, and California) although I knew my story as a white girl is so vastly different. The breadth of the novel is epic, and the heartbreaking tragedies and small triumphs of each individual and family (as per her Akan proverb quote in the front) weave their way into your spirit. By the end, however, I was a little worn from the “boy meets girl” formula that drives each chapter. I kn
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Jan 04, 2016
alana
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Jan 25, 2016
Ali
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Jul 29, 2016
KC
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Nov 21, 2016
Terri FL
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Aug 28, 2018
Erin (NY)
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Dec 05, 2018
Jayme Pendergraft
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Jun 10, 2019
Diana
marked it as to-read