Daughter e-bog
122,49 DKK
(inkl. moms 153,12 DKK)
The gifted author of the acclaimed memoir The Prisoners Wife delivers a deeply penetrating workan emotionally shattering first novel that explores the perils of silence and illuminates the fragile complexity of the mother-daughter bond.On a winter night in Brooklyn, Aya Rivers, a vibrant nineteen-year-old black girl, is shot by a white police officer in a case of mistaken identity. Her mother, ...
E-bog
122,49 DKK
Forlag
Scribner
Udgivet
11 maj 2010
Længde
272 sider
Genrer
FA
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781439125595
The gifted author of the acclaimed memoir The Prisoners Wife delivers a deeply penetrating workan emotionally shattering first novel that explores the perils of silence and illuminates the fragile complexity of the mother-daughter bond.On a winter night in Brooklyn, Aya Rivers, a vibrant nineteen-year-old black girl, is shot by a white police officer in a case of mistaken identity. Her mother, Miriam, a rigid and guarded woman, rushes to the hospital. As Miriam desperately waits at Ayas bedside, she falls back into memories of her own youth, when her life took a series of tragic turns as she struggled for independence and dealt with the end of her relationship with Ayas father. But as Miriams recollections of love and regret descend upon her, this woman who has spent nearly every day of her life in an emotional prison finds that her wounds slowly give way to healing and a tentative hopefulness. With the lyrical economy of poetry, Asha Bandele tells a powerful story that boldly confronts timely and troubling issues. Daughter is an unforgettable portrait of one extraordinary woman and her journeyfrom secrecy to openness, from the silence of isolation to the beauty of connection. This version of the ebook contains an updated introduction by the author and a very special survival guide for todays activists and advocates against police violence, including the founders and members of Black Lives Matter, and Michelle Alexander, Harry Belafonte, Susan L. Taylor, Marc Lamont Hill, journalists Esther Armah and Kirsten West Savali, and Kadiatou Diallo.