img Leseprobe Leseprobe

Blood on the Brain

Esinam Bediako

EPUB
ca. 9,49

Red Hen Press img Link Publisher

Belletristik/Erzählende Literatur

Beschreibung

An impulsive, madcap, and newly concussed young woman comes of age as she navigates her Ghanaian American identity, her relationships, and the muddled landscape of history, memory, imagination, and delusion.

Twenty-four-year-old Akosua is easily knocked off her feet. When she falls and hits her head, she’s too preoccupied with her latest dramas to fully absorb the shock. In the span of three months, she has broken up with her boyfriend Wisdom, discovered that her deadbeat dad has moved back to the States from Ghana, and dropped so many classes that she believes she’s the only history grad student in the history of grad students to be registered for just one partial-credit class. Instead of facing her problems, Akosua seeks distraction in Daniel, a “good Ghanaian man.” But as her head injury worsens, she questions whether she can continue to run away from her father any more than she can keep ignoring her brain and its traumas. Vibrant, funny, and bittersweet, Blood on the Brain is a novel about the complications of family, romance, and culture—and how coming of age can feel like a blow to the head.

Weitere Titel in dieser Kategorie
Cover Fool's Gold
William W. Johnstone
Cover Martha
Susan Holloway Scott
Cover The Far Seeker
Brett Cogburn
Cover Hidden Valley
Janet Dailey
Cover Denouement
Nic Daniels
Cover Abandon
Sangeeta Bandyopadhyay
Cover Sand
Einat Yakir
Cover One Good Thing
Alexandra Potter
Cover The Matriarch
Pamela Redmond
Cover Hex House
Amy Jane Stewart
Cover The Calamity Club
Kathryn Stockett
Cover So, I Met This Guy
Alexandra Potter
Cover Crying Call
Jeffe Boats
Cover Ingrown
Katie Oliver

Kundenbewertungen

Schlagwörter

Coming-of-age, first-generation immigrant, mental health, African American fiction, New York City, women’s fiction, family relationships, father-daughter relationships, mothers and adult daughters, Ghanaian American, dating and relationships, cultural heritage fiction, graduate students, post-concussion syndrome