![]() ![]() ![]() At the height of Asante resistance to British colonization, a young woman searches for her ancestors in the Asante capital city of Kumasi and in a village empty of its warriors, a mother is haunted by visions of a woman made of fire. As the British end their participation in the slave trade and turn their attention to colonization in West Africa, a young man escapes his family’s shadow for the anonymity of a “small-small” (p. ![]() In Cape Coast, a reluctant son takes on his father’s mantle as a British slave trader, navigating relationships between British companies, the Fante tribes of the coast, and the Asante villages of the inland. “Every moment has a precedent and comes from this other moment, that comes from this other moment, that comes from this other moment.”Įffia and Esi’s descendants disperse and converge throughout the novel. ![]() “Our history…informs the way that we treat people in the present,” Gyasi said in an interview with TIME. In Gyasi’s deft hands, time is elastic: 20 years pass in a sentence, a single moment stretches across pages, the past folds into the present. While Effia marries an Englishman and leads a life of comfort in the palatial rooms of Cape Coast Castle, Esi is captured in a raid on her village, imprisoned in the very same castle, and sold into slavery in America. Told over the course of eight generations, Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing follows the descendants of two half-sisters-Effia and Esi-who are born in 18th-century Ghana. ![]()
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