Book description
A BBC Top 100 Novels that Shaped Our World
Effia and Esi: two sisters with two very different destinies. One sold into slavery; one a slave trader's wife. The consequences of their fate reverberate through the generations that follow. Taking us from the Gold Coast of Africa to the cotton-picking…
Why read it?
13 authors picked Homegoing as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I remember my daughter, an astute and sensitive reader from a very young age, coming downstairs in tears after finishing this book when she was in high school.
Her tears were understandable; though Homegoing, remarkably, addresses the lives of members of seven generations of two connected Ghanian families in a mere 320 pages, we as readers come to care deeply about each of the fourteen characters whose stories fill the book.
The storytelling is that concise, yet also that rich and distinct, depicting two separate—but tragically related—trajectories for these families caught in the inevitable and devastating web of slavery,…
From Joyce's list on exploring time and place in intriguing ways.
This is the type of writing I've dreamed of accomplishing. It is somehow sweeping and immersive at the same time. Gyasi doesn't look away from hardship and trauma, but also doesn't immerse us in violence just for the sake of it. Everything in this book is intentional, and necessary, and important. I learned about aspects of African and African-American history that I didn't know much about before, and I find myself thinking about many of the characters months later. This book has stuck to my bones.
This is my second read of Homegoing, and I’m always mesmerized by its imagery and ability to get me vested in characters that I know will have fleeting moments in such a vast narrative.
I consider this story a modern masterpiece in its conquering of a narrative that spans two hundred years and in its attention to detail. Gyasi’s ability to “show” through expressive descriptions and omniscient situational awareness offered such emotion for me. I think this level of placing the reader “there” would be very difficult for most authors with so many characters and alternating POVs.
It also…
If you love Homegoing...
I really admire how this book traces two lines of a tumultuous family history through a series of short stories.
Opening in Ghana 250 years ago, the book follows two trajectories: one family branch that is kidnapped into slavery in America, and a second that remains in Africa while collaborating with slave traders.
This is a brave book that is not afraid to pose difficult questions, but in doing so, it opens a clear-eyed perspective on the way that history shapes us.
From Janice's list on family dramas in a multi-generational perspective.
This is a fiction book with deep roots in history. It touches on race in ways that international relations ignore. The question of gender and culture gets weaved in history as Effia and Esi's (two estranged sisters) stories are told and their journeys unfold generationally. At the end of the book, you will long for a "home" which you may truly call your own!
You may be curious how this fiction book shapes my worldview as a non-fiction and academic writer. To me, fiction is grounded in the multitude of emotions and experiences of reality. The art of storytelling tells…
From Debangana's list on gender and culture with a unique lens.
‘History is Storytelling,’ Yaa Gyasi writes in her epic novel Homegoing.
The compelling story Gyasi tells here is of two sisters born in Ghana during the eighteenth century: one the daughter of an African woman and a British slave trader; and the other a woman forced into the slave trade. By following the two sisters’ descendants down to the present, Gyasi illuminates how the slave trade’s poisonous legacies—enslavement, colonialism, and racism—continually blighted the lives of Africans and African Americans.
A beautifully written and deeply personal novel, Homegoing is essential reading for anyone interested in the slave trade’s history and…
From Nicholas' list on how the Atlantic slave trade operated.
If you love Yaa Gyasi...
The story of Ghanaian half-sisters expands into a majestic historical epic as Effia marries the English governor of the local slave trade and Esi is abducted and transported to America.
Spanning more than two centuries from the mid-1700s, the novel traces the fates of both halves of the divided family, embroiled on the one hand in the tribal rivalries and colonial exploitations of Ghana and immersed on the other in the horrors of plantation life, the challenges of post-Civil-War migration, and the cultural dynamism of Harlem.
By the time distant cousins from the two lines, Marjorie and Marcus, meet in…
From Thomas' list on siblings in trying circumstances.
Homegoing is a powerful novel that seamlessly weaves together different eras of the African American experience by highlighting the struggles that one family faces across generations from enslavement to segregation to modern challenges that stem from those troubling legacies.
At the same time, the novel similarly examines the generational challenges of a distantly-related family in Ghana and shows how the two family’s fates are cosmically intertwined.
From Michelle's list on surviving the African American experience.
A recent read for me, and an unforgettable one. Homegoing is a family saga stemming from two African half-sisters who never meet. This beautifully written book delves deeply into difficult topics and leaves the reader feeling as if they have undergone the same long and arduous journey.
From Karen's list on complicated sister relationships.
If you love Homegoing...
Being originally from West Africa, this book is a journey back home for me in so many ways. A real homegoing. It is well-written and paced in a way that as I follow each character, I am reliving their story and relating to it on an emotional level I surprised myself with.
From Sinmisola's list on historical stories on love and slavery.
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