Everything good will come : a novel

Titre
Everything good will come : a novel

Sefi. Atta

Sommaire
It is 1971, and Nigeria is under military rule, though the politics of the state matter less than those of her home to Enitan Taiwo, an eleven-year-old girl tired of waiting for school to start. Told in the voice of Enitan Taiwo, a young woman living in Lagos, Nigeria, in the aftermath of that country's independence, the narrative of "Everything Good Will Come" covers nearly thirty years and is framed by the lifelong friendship between Enitan and Sheri, a half-caste neighbor girl with a sharp tongue and wild ways. A nation struggling to come to terms with its independence, couching its freedom in the oppressive terms of internal military rule, Nigeria is a country with unnatural borders created by outsiders. But to Enitan as a growing girl, the private wars within her parents' home shape her natural skepticism and fear of loss. Enitan knows how privileged she is in her lawyer father's home. She sees the poverty and knows about the brutal military dictatorship. But it is not until politics invades her own family that she defies her kind husband and moves from bystander to activist.

Date de publication comme intervalle
2005

Description matérielle
336 p. ; 22 cm.

Terme de vedette-matière
Female friendship -- Fiction.
 
Women -- Nigeria -- Fiction.
 
Social classes -- Fiction.

Terme géographique
Nigeria -- Fiction.

Genre
Psychological fiction.
 
Feminist fiction.

Résumé
It is 1971, and Nigeria is under military rule, though the politics of the state matter less than those of her home to Enitan Taiwo, an eleven-year-old girl tired of waiting for school to start. Told in the voice of Enitan Taiwo, a young woman living in Lagos, Nigeria, in the aftermath of that country's independence, the narrative of "Everything Good Will Come" covers nearly thirty years and is framed by the lifelong friendship between Enitan and Sheri, a half-caste neighbor girl with a sharp tongue and wild ways. A nation struggling to come to terms with its independence, couching its freedom in the oppressive terms of internal military rule, Nigeria is a country with unnatural borders created by outsiders. But to Enitan as a growing girl, the private wars within her parents' home shape her natural skepticism and fear of loss. Enitan knows how privileged she is in her lawyer father's home. She sees the poverty and knows about the brutal military dictatorship. But it is not until politics invades her own family that she defies her kind husband and moves from bystander to activist.

Numéro international normalisé des livres (ISBN)
9781904456957

Informations de publication
Northampton, Mass. : Interlink Books, Oxford New Internationalist, 2005.


BibliothèqueNuméro de rayonType de documentCode à barres du documentStatut
Edmonton Christian HighFIC ATTBook30905000014468Fiction