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BookDragon Blog

06 Aug / Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi [in Booklist]

Following her spectacularly lauded, bestselling historical and ancestral debut, Homegoing (2016), Yaa Gyasi turns to the contemporary, tracing the dissolution of a Ghanaian immigrant family. By the time Gifty leaves Alabama for Harvard, she’s resolved to “build a new Gifty from scratch” by shedding the debilitating experiences of her young life: her father’s abandonment and return to Ghana, her older brother Nana’s heroin overdose, her mother’s suicidal depression, her faltering faith. In Cambridge, she could be “confident, poised, smart … strong and unafraid.”

Four years later, she’s untethered again, arriving at Stanford to work toward a neuroscience PhD. For all her groundbreaking research, she’s really just trying to comprehend what happened to beloved Nana via cocaine-and-then-Ensure-addicted lab mice which became willing to risk physical damage for gratification. Six years into the program, Gifty’s mother arrives, once more cripplingly withdrawn. Her silent presence will require some semblance of confrontation and reconciliation with their tragic past.

Despite compounding challenges and tragedies, Gyasi never allows Gifty to devolve into paralyzing self-absorption and malaise. With deft agility and undeniable artistry, Gyasi’s latest is an eloquent examination of resilient survival.

Review: “Fiction,” Booklist, July 2020

Readers: Adult

Published: 2020

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Adult Readers, Black/African American, Fiction, Repost Tags > BookDragon, Booklist, Death, Drugs/Alcohol/Addiction, Family, Friendship, Identity, Immigration, Mental Illness, Mother/daughter relationship, Parent/child relationship, Siblings, Transcendent Kingdom, Yaa Gyasi
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