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Ebook300 pages4 hours
Reading The Ceiling
By Dayo Forster
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this ebook
Ayodele has just turned eighteen and has decided, having now reached womanhood, that the time is right to lose her virginity. She's drawn up a shortlist: Reuben, the failsafe; an, a long-admired schoolfriend; Frederick Adams, the 42-year-old, soon-to-be-pot-bellied father of her best friend. What she doesn't know is that her choice of suitor will have a drastic effect on the rest of her life. Three men. Three paths. One will send Ayodele to Europe, to university and to a very different life - but it will be a voyage strewn with heartache. Another will send her around the globe on an epic journey, transforming her beyond recognition but at the cost of an almost unbearable loss. And another will see her remain in Africa, a wife and mother caught in a polygamous marriage. Each will change her irrevocably - but which will she choose?
“A fresh, vibrant first novel set in Africa and England, exploring
the three different paths Adoyele's life could take” The Bookseller
“The energy and verve of Forster's first few pages are breathtaking, and Ayodele is irresistible” Daily Telegraph
“a ... complex examination of potential futures ... Forster has written a thought-provoking series of narratives” Financial Times
“the tussle between fate and free will ... a warmly informed portrait of modern African womanhood” Observer
“A fresh, vibrant first novel set in Africa and England, exploring
the three different paths Adoyele's life could take” The Bookseller
“The energy and verve of Forster's first few pages are breathtaking, and Ayodele is irresistible” Daily Telegraph
“a ... complex examination of potential futures ... Forster has written a thought-provoking series of narratives” Financial Times
“the tussle between fate and free will ... a warmly informed portrait of modern African womanhood” Observer
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Reviews for Reading The Ceiling
Rating: 3.4 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
5 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Set in Gambia, this novel traces a young woman's choices through three alternative lives. The author catches the tone and attitudes of Ayodele as a teenager and then young and middle aged woman well. All of our choices determine both create and limit the subsequent paths of our lives. Forster explores this idea with rich characters and vivid writing.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's the morning of Ayodele's 18th birthday. She has decided that today, she will have sex for the first time. But she hasn't quite decided who with. She lies on her bed, thinking about the options, and before we know it, we are into the story of the first possibility, and at the start of three versions of how her life turns out.I was really impressed by this book until the end of the first section. It's very well-written, and I enjoyed the story (in this version, Ayodele leaves Gambia and studies in London, before eventually returning home). But as I read the other two stories, I started to have doubts, despite the good writing. Arguably, in the first story, Ayodele lets decisions be made for her, in the second she actively chooses, and in the third she deliberately makes what she knows to be a bad choice. However, the developments in her life are barely related to that one particular choice on her birthday, and her personality doesn't seem to develop differently either - which makes the framing device a bit pointless.Indeed, there's one big difference which affects the course of her life which would have been decided before that birthday (she's informed of it in a letter which she receives the day after), which really isn't playing by the rules!I'll keep an eye out for what else Forster writes, as this has potential, but I wouldn't actively recommend it to others.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5"I can choose to be the hunter or the lion. What will my story be?", 7 Feb. 2016This review is from: Reading the Ceiling (Paperback)As the novel opens on narrator Ayodele's 18th birthday, I thought this was going to be a YA tale. Discos, the opposite sex and deciding on a future occupy the young people:"We knot ourselves into a drift of conversations, starting and ebbing. University crops up again. And what we intend to do with our lives. We talk about the moon, about whether mermaids will come this far up the river, about crocodiles and oysters."Ayodele is planning to take a lover and is preparing a short-list of likely candidates....The fascinating structure of this work is that Forster gives us THREE stories of how Ayodele's life turns out, long-term, depending on the choices she makes; the men, the career options, religion, motherhood... And of course, much of life is down to fate and extraneous events.As the stories move on to Ayodele's middle age, I found this quite a mopving and thought-provoking novel.An easy-read but enjoyable and worthwhile.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5"Once you make some choices, they stick - you can't shake them off. They cling and shape you."This is the story of Ayodele told three ways. She is a young woman in Gambia, determined to lose her virginity on her 18th birthday. And she does, but her decisions about with whom she'll sleep have consequences beyond that single night. Not explicitly - she doesn't reflect upon and rue the event as extraordinary in any of the three stories - but in smaller ways of indicating and shaping her character and approach to interpersonal relationships afterwards.Unfortunately, there wasn't a lot to this book beyond the framing device. Ayodele wades through the subsequent events that make up her life, but both she and her settings were difficult to feel engaged in. At some points, I felt like the decisions she made as to whom to sleep with were the most defining decisions we saw that made up her character, because for so much of the plot, she just lets life happen to her. So it was an interesting set-up that unfortunately didn't follow through with any great narrative point.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5A book that starts with the interesting premise: an eighteen year old girl has made the decision to lose her virginity. She has narrowed her choices down to a short list, and the book chronicles how her life would change depending on who she chooses. Great premise in theory put into practice, it seemed forced, cliché, possibly not even culturally accurate (would a woman and sister accept even the idea of artificial insemination in the Gambia?) and over simplified.Finally, sometimes the plots of the stories seem totally irrelevant to her decision to who to sleep with.