Great African Reads discussion

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The Girl with the Louding Voice
Regional Reads - Books 2025
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July/Aug 2025 | The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Daré
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I'm pleased to see so much interest in the book and am glad I nominated it.


The use of language is really one of the best bits!






Discuss anything relevant to the read - and your thoughts on the book :)"
It seems you missed putting the right book name in your first sentence Anetq. I didn't notice it until now.
George P. wrote: "It seems you missed..."
Thank you George - You know I count on you to catch my copy/paste errors :D
Glad everyone seems to be enjoying the read!
Thank you George - You know I count on you to catch my copy/paste errors :D
Glad everyone seems to be enjoying the read!

07/31 update: now 80% through.

I admit to being taken back to my own youth and realizing that at age 14 I still hadn't quite decided I was even willing to consider an "attraction" to boys yet. They were just other people to me until I was 16 or so! I would have been terrified to be in Adunni's predicament.
The patriarchic aspects of this culture horrify me. The lack of education. The lack of any aspect of helping the children learn much of anything other than the traditional survival skills. These aspects always blow my mind and remind me that we can never know what life experiences others have endured.

As I mentioned before, the audiobook reader was great; she is a very experienced British actress named Adjoa Andoh who has narrated about 150 audiobooks. Her mother is British and her father an immigrant from Ghana. She has just been appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE).
Lynn's comments prompted me to ask Google Gemini what the high school graduation rate is in Nigeria- I got some interesting info. Generally it's about 50%, a little higher for males, much higher for urban and southern parts of the country than the rural parts Adunni came from. Kids like Adunni are probably very aware that many people in the world have much easier lives, especially "abroad". The novel did a good job of showing what it might be like to be one of them, a girl from a poor family.

Huh. I didn't realize this was her debut!
"Lynn's comments prompted me to ask Google Gemini what the high school graduation rate is in Nigeria- I got some interesting info. Generally it's about 50%, a little higher for males, much higher for urban and southern parts of the country than the rural parts Adunni came from. Kids like Adunni are probably very aware that many people in the world have much easier lives, especially "abroad". The novel did a good job of showing what it might be like to be one of them, a girl from a poor family."
Interesting statistics. And good to know there is a sequel!


Have you been able to get back to it and maybe finish yet Lynn?

And yet her descriptions of the world around her are colorful and are able to tell the reader both what she sees and what she feels. This I really appreciated.
I also really liked the idea of inserting sentences from the Nigerian book of facts at the beginning of each chapter, as to underline what was happening to Adunni.
What I did not like: it is in a way too long. I think the author wants too much to depict the female situation in Nigeria, not only for poor girls like Adunni, and goes too deep into Big Madam's and Tia's personal events. That was too much for me and too didactic.
However I think this book does a good job in showing a real and serious situation.
In my opinion, better information than great literature, but a good read though
thank you so much for the company in reading this novel and in case of mistakes, please excuse my English: I am Italian mothertongue
Discuss anything relevant to the read - and your thoughts on the book :)