At first, I was a bit put off, as the story starts with a birth in a 19th century West African village in the Asante and Fante region, involving fire and a mean step-mother and it all felt very magical realism/literary fiction. It did have some of that, but fortunately, as I read on I saw that it was in the service of a much more interesting project. Homegoing is basically a narrative genealogy beginning with a pair of sisters, separated at birth in the aforementioned village. One stays in Africa and the other is captured as a slave and sent to America. Each chapter is then the story of the next generation down. We get the entire connection from the beginning in Africa to two modern-day people with all the major historical stops along the way.
It's all very narrative and story-driven as everything has to be these days, so each chapter is sort of like a finely crafted short story, though connected both to the story before and after. The literary trappings are much more toned down for the rest of the book except the beginning and the end to tie it all thematically together. I found myself just enjoying (though there are a lot of unpleasant moments) the story and wanting to know how each person would end up. The inherited trauma of slavery and its fallout both in society and the individuals is woven throughout the stories. It makes the book doubly effective as a history, in that it really shows what actually happened while also helping you to understand how it impacted and impacts the people.
The beginning was particularly enlightening for me, as it portrays the mechanics and politics of the slave trade on the Africa side. There are only the briefest scenes of the horror of the slaves being kept in Cape Coast Castle and then put on the ships, but they are almost harder to take than the tortures of slavery in the South which I had just finished reading. I never doubt the capacity of cruelty by our species, but it is still shocking to even read about how the slaves were treated.
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