Tomorrow I Become A Woman By Aiwanose Odafen || Book Review.
You forgive him and move on. For the sake of your marriage and your children. That is marriage. You manage, I manage, we all manage.“-Mama Uju
A couple of days ago, I was looking for a book to read then I decided to go through my reading list and recommendations from friends. So I came across this book written by a Nigerian author, ’Tomorrow I Become A Woman’. This book was recommended to me about a year ago by my very good friend and I almost forgot about it. No, I actually forgot about the book.
It's been about two years since I'd read books from a Nigerian author. I'd buried my head in foreign books and work. So, I will just say, this book reminded me of what I have been missing from our Nigeria authors and I will do better from now on.
’Tomorrow I Become A Woman’ written by Aiwanose Odafen is a book that has about four genres incorporated in the story. It is historical, psychological, coming-of-age and bildungsroman fiction. Having these genres all together in a story created a masterpiece. This book was published on 25th April 2022 with 416 pages.
The plot of this book centers around Obianuju, who is a young woman whose life has been mold according to societal patriarchy and her journey in life right from her university days to when she comes of age for marriage. Her relationship with her mother is a relationship that is filled with abuse, be it psychological, emotional, mental and physical. She is the daughter her mother never wanted.
It is time for her to get married, which in terms means she is ripe for marriage, Obianuju meets Gozie. A man who is handsome, charismatic, a Christian and most importantly, an Igbo man. Also, Obianuju is fond of a young man Akin who is a Yoruba by tribe and doesn't have the rest of Gozie’s characteristics. She knew that she had to choose Gozie as he is the perfect and right man for her in the eyes of her but Akin was not. Wanting her mother's approval, she got married to Gozie but unfortunately, she never knew that she had just tied the knots with an abusive man. Will Obianuju come out of this alive?
My Review And Rating.
I think this book has made its readers express themselves in so many ways when they talk about the it. Why is this? Because the story of this book brings back memories and it is very relatable regardless of the fact it is fiction.
’Tomorrow I Become A Woman’ was set in Lagos, Nigeria during the 70s to 80s when Nigeria was at war (Biafra/Civil war). It portrays well how Nigeria is a patriarchal country and women continue to suffer as a result of this practice. Though it is a fictional story, it is indeed the reality of a lot of women in Nigeria. It is a normal thing in Nigeria that a mother will go through abuse in marriage, let her own daughter go through the same and then teach her daughter that it is tradition. It is normal.
I love how Odafen wrote this book from three different perspectives (yesterday, today and tomorrow). She brought to life, familiar places Nigeria with just words. Her character was built genuinely with I think first-hand experience. All characters were all very relatable and well developed. The story itself was very engaging and intriguing right from the start to the end eliciting all kinds of intense emotions from the readers.
One of the things that I was happy Odafen depicted was how culture and societal expectations play a role in keeping women in abusive marriages especially in our African society (Nigeria). Women don't have a say and they are mostly seen as slaves and baby making machines. To think that with the modern, things will change, no it doesn't, the flow of such abuse continues.
Also, Odafen portrayed some sensitive themes, like marriage, gender expectations, gender inequality, Nigerian culture, and patriarchal norms. All these themes were depicted well with very realistic scenes and instances. I say these themes are emotional and sensitive because I was full of rage, frustrated, disappointed and sad while I read this book.
Do I like this book? Yes, I did. This book depicts the reality of most Nigerian women, it depicts how the societal patriarchy has suppress Nigerian women into all forms of abuse in the name of tradition and culture, it depicts how children are being traumatized by their parents, and it depicts how the female gender is seen as assets and commodity to toyed with however the male gender wishes.
Would I recommend this book? Of course. I encourage you to read this book if you haven't.
Rating this book, I will give it a good solid 4.8 out of 5 stars.
All images above are from my E-library
Header images compiled in Canva.
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Women now have a say although some people still believe that women are meant to be in the kitchen. This fact is not true...
I need to search for the book and read it
When you do read it, I hope it will enlighten you more. Thank you for stopping by.
I skip reading books like this because it is mentally and emotionally triggering. I know the end product is to bring certain things to light, but going through the pages and feeling the pain these women go through in this patriarchal society where in turn, the mothers call the slavery "normal" annoys me so much. It mostly is upsetting because what is written as so called fiction is big time the reality of almost 80% of Nigerian women.
Inasmuch as the author will tag the book fiction, there's somewhere in it a nonfiction experienced first hand by the same author. The author of "The Joys of Motherhood" I've forgotten her name also called hers fiction until a little background check was ran and it was found that 50% of that book is truth.
Someday, I will write a book to correct this so called normality. He that will get triggered will get triggered and will respond just like the Igbo man who replied "So Long A Letter" by Mariama Ba with "Dear Ramatoulaye" did after he got triggered that the female character took the lead and dealt with the men who took advantage of her. His reply was so out of place and it sucked fr fr. I don't know if you've read the books I've mentioned but if you haven't you should. It's a good read. Full of lessons.
The books you mentioned, I haven't read them before but I will add them to TBR now. You are this book is triggering. I dont know i finished reading the book and I didn't smash my iPad.😅 'The Joy's Of Motherhood by Buchi Emecheta' is similar to this book and good book.
Wow! This is an amazing idea. You should start working on it now.. Sketches here there before you know it become a book with hundreds of pages. Thank you for stopping by.