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Ellah Allfrey's Top Book Recommendations

Want to know what books Ellah Allfrey recommends on their reading list? We've researched interviews, social media posts, podcasts, and articles to build a comprehensive list of Ellah Allfrey's favorite book recommendations of all time.

1

On Black Sisters Street

On Black Sisters Street tells the haunting story of four very different women who have left their African homeland for the riches of Europe—and who are thrown together by bad luck and big dreams into a sisterhood that will change their lives.

Each night, Sisi, Ama, Efe, and Joyce stand in the windows of Antwerp’s red-light district, promising to make men’s desires come true—if only for half an hour. Pledged to the fierce Madam and a mysterious pimp named Dele, the girls share an apartment but little else—they keep their heads down, knowing that one step out of line could...
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Recommended by Ellah Allfrey, and 1 others.

Ellah AllfreyI published this at Cape. She is Nigerian, a professor and a city councillor and she is married to a Belgian. This is her first book in English – she writes in Flemish. It opens in a house on this street and one of the women has been murdered and they are just finding this out. As they mourn her the other women all tell their stories. They are all prostitutes but not escort girls. They are the... (Source)

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2

The Kitchen God's Wife

Winnie and Helen have kept each other's worst secrets for more than fifty years. Now, because she believes she is dying, Helen wants to expose everything. And Winnie angrily determines that she must be the one to tell her daughter, Pearl, about the past—including the terrible truth even Helen does not know. And so begins Winnie's story of her life on a small island outside Shanghai in the 1920s, and other places in China during World War II, and traces the happy and desperate events that led to Winnie's coming to America in 1949. less
Recommended by Ellah Allfrey, and 1 others.

Ellah AllfreyThis is my bestseller! Amy Tan unleashed this western obsession, or interest in, Chinese women’s writing and it’s not the best book in the world, but it’s a classic story of not understanding your parents until it’s nearly too late. There is this woman married to a white American man and she has always thought her parents never loved her. She finds out that in Chinese culture you must never tell... (Source)

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3

Sparrow

Troy Brennan

Every southie in Boston knows that name. The son of a dead mobster. The heart throb with steel blue eyes. "The Fixer" who can make or break you in this city.

Oh, and my new husband.

Sparrow Raynes

That's me. No one seemed to remember my name up until he barged into my life.
But then he caged me.
Kidnapped me.
And killed every chance I had to runaway from the place where we grew up.
Put simply, Troy Brennan clipped my wings.

I have dreams, big ones, but I doubt he'd ever let me chase them....
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Recommended by Ellah Allfrey, and 1 others.

Ellah AllfreyI am a big science fiction junkie. Ekow Eshun wrote a sci-fi book called Black Gold of the Sun and he says that a lot of immigrant children love science fiction because it is about travel to new worlds even further away than the world they have come from. I found that made sense to me. Russell is a feminist academic and this book is about a Jesuit priest on a Catholic mission, not to Peru, but to... (Source)

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4

A Life Elsewhere

For the characters in Segun Afolabi's debut collection, 'elsewhere' is a place they must transform into home. In the award-winning 'Monday Morning' a refugee boy puzzles out his place in a new land. A bereaved father in 'Arithmetic' thinks back to a confusing, youthful sexual encounter that has left him emotionally scarred; Jacinta faces a long retirement with a husband she is not sure she likes in 'Jumbo and Jacinta' and 'The Wine Guitar' tells the story of an aging musician who pays a prostitute for the gift of her youth.

These are tales of diaspora, of people making their lives...
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Recommended by Ellah Allfrey, and 1 others.

Ellah AllfreyYes. Segun is someone I published at Cape. He is Nigerian but his parents were diplomats so he has travelled a lot and his stories reflect that. One of them, Monday Morning, won the Caine prize. It’s about a little boy living in a refugee hostel and he sees this amazing hotel one day and goes in and falls asleep on one of the beds. The writing is very still and there is not much plot really, but... (Source)

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5
An alternate cover for this isbn can be found here.

The story of a man undone by a culture that in part created him, Season of Migration to the North, is a powerful and evocative examination of colonization in two vastly different worlds.

When a young man returns to his village in the Sudan after many years studying in Europe, he finds that among the familiar faces there is now a stranger - the enigmatic Mustafa Sa'eed. As the two become friends, Mustafa...
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Robert IrwinIt’s a novel about the clash of cultures, the intermixture of cultures. It’s a novel about what happens to a man, or two men, when they leave their village and go north, to England, the land where the fish die of cold, and get a western education, and some of the dangers of that. It’s a very strange and very complex novel (Source)

Robert IrwinIt’s a novel about the clash of cultures, the intermixture of cultures. It’s a novel about what happens to a man, or two men, when they leave their village and go north, to England, the land where the fish die of cold, and get a western education, and some of the dangers of that. It’s a very strange and very complex novel (Source)

Mathias EnardIt’s a masterpiece. Probably the best Arabic novel of the 20th century. Subtle, dark and deeply ironic. (Source)

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