
"The Italian-born daughter of Somali parents, Scego ... writes with forthright simplicity and unblinking honesty ... Bearing witness through fiction, Scego's Adua gives urgent voice to the silent caught between shifting loyalties, abusive power, and nations at war. "
-The Christian Science Monitor
"This incantatory novel is a dialogue between a freedom-seeking daughter and her traditionalist father. For Adua, the bonds of love prove as constraining as any legal system bent on controlling outsiders. As a child, she believed Italy was freedom. As a black woman, she is forced to reconsider. Yet Rome offered refuge during Somalia's civil conflict and the space to contemplate returning once it eased. Adopted homes may not give themselves fully, Scego seems to suggest, but they powerfully clarify what has been lost."
--The Boston Globe
"Lovely prose and memorable characters make this novel a thought-provoking and moving consideration of the wreckage of European oppression."
--Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)
"Italy's most obvious answer to Toni Morrison ... Scego's work offers more than a few delights."
--The Point
"Lucid and forthright ... examines the linked consequences of Italian colonization, instability in 1970s Somalia, and the current refugee crisis in Europe ... an illuminating work appropriate for a wide range of readers."
--Library Journal (Starred Review)
"Three experiences of blackness in Rome, three generations searching for a way out. Scego, who is Somali-Italian, is an incisive writer on migration, skilled in making the historical personal."
--Toronto Globe and Mail
"A memorable, affecting tale ... brings the decolonialization of Africa to life ... all the more affecting for being told without sentimentality or self-pity."
--Foreword Reviews