Reader Score
70%
70% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 4 reviews on
A woman in 15th century West Africa named Ada buries her child and confronts a Portuguese enslaver. A woman in Victorian England named Ada Lovelace, a mathematical genius and computer programming pioneer, tries to hide her affair with Charles Dickens from her husband. A woman named Ada, imprisoned in a concentration camp at Mittelbau-Dora in 1945, will survive one more day in enforced prostitution. Connected by an unknown but sentient spirit, and a bracelet of fertility beads that each Ada encounters at a pivotal moment in her life, these women share a name and a purpose.
As their interwoven narratives converge on a modern day Ada, a young Ghanaian woman who finds herself pregnant, alone, in Berlin, searching for a home before her baby arrives, their shared spirit will find a way to help her break the vicious cycle of injustice.
This novel is a feat of imagination and breaks down simplistic notions of history as a straight line; one woman's experience matters to another's 400 years later, on a different continent. In this deeply moving, at times mordantly funny, ultimately hopeful book, there is a connection between all those fighting for love, for family, for justice, for a home.
Editing and sometimes writing stories @bostonglobemag. Previously book criticism @npr and culture reporting @nyt, @ft
Did not like Ada's Room, a novel that treats its characters as accumulations of historical traumas rather than people with ideas, personality, or agency: https://t.co/7PWsi6izNp
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In Sharon Dodua Otoo’s novel, “Ada’s Room,” readers follow the many lives of one woman through unexpected eyes. https://t.co/7188R8miwv
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Have you jumped into the world of the ADA's yet? 🧐 Hear from @SharonDoduaOtoo herself and see why you should pick up your copy (English translation by @jp0lizei) today! 📖 https://t.co/o7UKUtXLlq https://t.co/HPNRud7nBb
"Thrillingly, astonishingly original. You will not have read anything quite like this before." --R.O. Kwon, author of The Incendiaries
"[A] novel that demands a great deal emotionally and intellectually of the reader, but its boldness and ambition leave an indelible imprint. A rule-shattering novel about the presentness of the past." --Kirkus
"An impressive and highly original work, brimming over with energy." - Times Literary Supplement
"Sharon Dodua Otoo is the new voice in German literature.... Her debut novel goes big." --Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger
"Otoo is a singular voice in contemporary German literature.... [A] daring experiment, not unlike Yaa Gyasi's debut novel, Homegoing." --Der Tagesspiegel
"By effortlessly moving between centuries in her novel, Sharon Dodua Otoo reveals not only the weight of history that comes to bear on a young Black woman in dire circumstances who is looking for a home - it also demonstrates which patterns have remained powerful to this day." --Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung