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African Authors
By Diane , Armchair Tour Guide · 16 posts · 923 views
By Diane , Armchair Tour Guide · 16 posts · 923 views
last updated Feb 06, 2025 09:27PM
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By Diane , Armchair Tour Guide · 88 posts · 963 views
last updated Dec 29, 2018 09:44AM
What Members Thought

"Little Bee" touches on important issues about immigration and interactions between those in developed and developing countries. Somehow I had trouble seeing the title character as a fully rounded one. At the same time, the other main character, from the "western" world, was more developed, but still hard to get to know. She seemed disengaged from her own life, and maybe this was part of the point, but it was therefore hard to connect with and sympathize with her, at least for me. Still, there a
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The story begins promisingly enough, with Little Bee, a Nigerian immigrant to the UK, being 'released' from the immigrant detention centre along with a few other women. She has only one place to go - the home of a white man she had met on a beach in Nigeria - and you want to find out the whys and hows of the matter because everything's just plain odd.
Then you realise the chapters alternate between the voice of Little Bee and that of the white man's wife, Sarah, a woman who's supposed to be a mag ...more
Then you realise the chapters alternate between the voice of Little Bee and that of the white man's wife, Sarah, a woman who's supposed to be a mag ...more

The Other Hand is a story paradoxing modern day England vs. war raveged Nigeria through the eyes of an English mother and a girl refugee. Very interesting to expose how little the hosting nations of refugees actually know about the people they provide asylum to and how the refugees view their adopted country.

The first half of Little Bee was amazing. Narratively brilliant, incredibly disturbing, an entire world to escape into and yet be unendingly assaulted by. I thought the second half lacked the panache and tightness of the first. The conversation the happens between Little Bee and Sarah's man was really over-written, and I thought most of the last half of the book was the same. But some truly amazing, haunting lines up to mid-way.
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I wanted to wait until Becky finished reading this before I posted my review, but now I kind of forget everything I would have said. I enjoyed the book for the most part, but I agree with a lot of what Becky wrote. Some of it just seemed unrealistic and a little forced or something, but i can't really remember.
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I loved Little Bee and her voice, and I loved little Charlie (er, I mean Batman). But the book is four stars instead of five because I didn't care for Sarah and thought that the chapter where she met Lawrence seemed uneven and not genuine.
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I'm not impressed with this book, especially after reading the over the top synopsis at the back of the book. It's a marketing ploy!!! huks. And I don't like most of the characters, except Little Bee.
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Mar 08, 2009
Sara
marked it as to-read

Jun 02, 2009
Ali
marked it as to-read


Jul 01, 2010
Summer Rae Garcia
added it

Aug 21, 2010
Ching-In
marked it as to-read

Dec 26, 2011
Lorri
added it

May 07, 2014
Stephanie Zundel-Smith
rated it
it was ok
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review of another edition
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