In this richly observed historical, Italian Somali novelist Scego (
Adua) blends the real lives of activist Sarah Parker Remond and sculptor Edmonia Lewis—Black American women living in late-1800s Rome—to create a wholly original character in artist Lafanu Brown. Of Haitian Chippewa descent, Lafanu is taken from her family by the self-aggrandizing Bathsheba MacKenzie, whose plans to educate her are disrupted when Lafanu is badly beaten by a mob and thrown out of the elite school that considers her the problem. A private tutor encourages her artistic talents, a mentor insists on taking her to Rome, and Lafanu leaves behind the man she loves to launch a successful career. Standing before a fountain featuring four Moors in chains, she has an epiphany, as does university student Leila decades later on the same spot: Lafanu will paint the oppressed, while Leila—determined to “give others new eyes for seeing the world”—becomes an art curator championing Lafanu’s work even as she assists a young cousin who has fled Somalia and fallen foul of human traffickers.
VERDICT Fluid and refreshing, if occasionally slowed by detail, this work tells an important story.
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