3.82 AVERAGE

challenging dark hopeful reflective sad tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

Haha! Nån som jag läst en bok av får Nobelpriset! Och boken är fantastisk.

I’d say this is more of a 3.5 star for me. I liked the book for the most part but the parts that I really loved were the insights into Rehana and the chapter from Amin. Amin’s chapter was just phenomenal, the quiet way in which his family obligation and sacrifice is presented really moved me. I also really loved the way Rashid described his process of becoming alien, the line about starting to refer to people as black or white was truly insightful.
emotional reflective sad
emotional reflective sad slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated
emotional inspiring lighthearted medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
challenging dark reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
emotional hopeful informative reflective sad medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix

I'm not a fan. Not sure if it is the authors own story, if so it makes a little more sense, kind of...

I found it deliberately not helping the reader: Locations are not divulged until long into the stories, neither is the time period. The narrator shows up at the end of part one, but is suddenly no longer all-knowing, but a narrator full of maybes and unclear suggestions of how things might have happened, possibly. He turns out to be the narrator of most of the rest of the book.
But my biggest problem with this novel is the lack of action! Almost everything is told as mere 'descriptions of things that happened in the past' (all tell, no show!), and I like my books to have characters who act and make me want to know what happens after this... Even though the characters have acted, the narrative form of mere description makes me start googling the Battle of Omdurman, Abyssinia, Rimbaud (had no idea he was in Africa and running guns helping Ethiopia stay independant?!) and Ramses II aka Ozymandias.

The different parts of the book tell different stories of the title's desertion; being left by loved ones or leaving them. As a theme it is interesting to explore, but it didn't really work for me; I didn't really buy into the characters, and the colonial history being told simultaneously somehow seems like interspersed little lectures - possibly as it is not described in any detail, it is actually actively avoided. And that makes it detached to me. It's not an integral part of the story, more "and here's you little lecture on the colonisation of the mind that happens, when joining the diaspora in England".

The story didn't really work for me - but it did make me google quite a few very interesting things - and that's a tick for Tanzania in my reading Africa challenge, so there is that!

The first half of the book dragged a bit for me, but I loved how the story came together. It was far less linear than I was expecting for the premise since I’m used to books going generationally by direct lineage and not via affairs, etc. Amir and Rashid not being related to Rehanna added a good spin. (3.5/5)