Gorgeous, lyrical ... Examines with a poet’s precision the many ways in which storytelling is rooted in matriarchy, carrying messages between mothers and daughters as a means of survival ... In such scenes of compelling intimacy, the author’s narrative gifts shine through, the brief fragments making for quick, propulsive reading. At times, however, the collagelike structure threatens to disrupt the gravity of any one passage, with so many descriptions of the author’s prophetic dreams in the latter chapters that it’s difficult for a single narrative thread to cohere in the end. But perhaps this multiplicity of stories and selves is exactly what Alyan intends ... Shows the power of even a single narrative to resist the deliberate erasure of a people and their homeland, the violence of colonization.
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