Heimför

eBook

Icelandic language

Published Nov. 18, 2017 by JPV.

ISBN:
978-9935-11-768-7
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Systrunum Effiu og Esi auðnaðist aldrei að hittast í lifanda lífi. Báðar fæddust þær í Afríku á átjándu öld þegar þrælasalan á Gullströndinni stóð sem hæst. Önnur varð eiginkona þrælakaupmanns í heimalandinu; hin var seld til Ameríku. Við fylgjum þeim og afkomendum þeirra, sjö kynslóðum, í blíðu og stríðu allt til dagsins í dag.

Yaa Gyasi sló rækilega í gegn með þessari fyrstu bók sinni. Hún dregur upp áhrifamikla mynd af örlögum heillar þjóðar þar sem fjölskyldur eiga stöðugt á hættu að tvístrast og glata öllu sem þær eiga. Stríð, þrældómur, fangelsun – og hörmungar í einkalífi – skilja ástvini að og setja mark sitt á tilveruna. En Heimför er líka saga um óbilandi baráttu í hörðum heimi, um það hvernig miskunnarlaus minningin um ánauð greypist inn í innstu sálarkima manneskjunnar og verður henni ævarandi fjötur − eða hvatning til betra lífs. --forlagid.is

22 editions

reviewed Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi

I feel like this is a must-read for everyone.

This book is HEAVY. Would not recommend picking this one up if you are in an emotional state at all because this will rip you apart. Gyasi does an amazing job with writing about the Black experiences throughout history. You're following a family line through multiple generations from the beginning of slaves being sold off to the white men.

While this is a very heavy book on the emotions, it is not just trauma on display. There are a lot of heartfelt, joyful moments between family members and an underlying vein of hopefulness that you'll be able to see the family break out of the literal and metaphorical chains that they were placed in. The ending of the book was perfect and made me smile.

Cannot recommend this enough. Read this book!

Stimulating and Entrancing

This book gripped me immediately. A wonderfully written dive into how the slave trade effected and shaped not just the Americas, but also the land the slaves came from. I was enamored in how each generation built on the tragedy and triumphs of the previous generations. I also honestly appreciated that the book wasn't the equivalent of trauma porn, with moments of joy and achievement throughout.

I remember I finished this book on my lunch break at work, and I literally gasped in joy at the ending, as I felt it was the best way that things could have ended.

This book brought me so much joy, as well as great insight into the Black experience through the years and how each historical era changed things.

I've been verbally recommending this book to everyone, and now I'll do it online too.

Review of 'Homegoing' on 'Storygraph'

For me, this debut novel is without a doubt worth a recommendation. While its sprawling nature and largely unremarkable writing might make it fall flat for some readers, it presented an interesting, captivating story for me. Of course, this book isn’t worthy of a Nobel prize in literature, but that is an overly pretentious expectation for a writer. This book has its special pull for me, even if that didn’t come from the plot itself, but from my expectations and a collection of great characters.

As a whole, I enjoyed the depth, the unique structure of this book gave its characters, especially the strand of the family that remained in Ghana. And I enjoyed the look into Ghanaian history, that gave me the appetite to look into it more. The same unfortunately can’t be said for the view into US history. Though it certainly offers a unique perspective of slavery …

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