The days went by fast, and Kamao and Lindsey only had a week and a half
left to spend in Ghana. Mama Agatha and one of her maids set up the
breakfast table. Kamao was the first to join them just as they were
finishing up.
“Good morning, Mama,” he said.
“Good morning. Where is Lindsey?”
“She’s in the bathroom getting ready; you know how women are, taking
their time.”
Kamao grabbed an apple from the fruit basket on the breakfast table, but
Mama Agatha slapped the back of his hand. “Be a gentleman; I taught you
better. Don’t you know how to be a gentleman and wait for your woman?”
Kamao rubbed the back of his hand and quietly sat down, ashamed of
himself.
“Why do you like Lindsey so much, Mama?” he asked after a moment of
silence.
“She’s nice,” Mama Agatha said, still busy setting up the table.
“Her mother died when she was little. She had taught her well, from what
she told me. But she was raised by her father after mother passed
away.”
“Then her father had taught her well too,” Mama Agatha said.
Kamao is so basically good, but the world is trying to force him to accept
that not everyone has such a kind heart and straight moral compass.
Official synopsis:
Kamao is the son of a prominent Ghanaian academic and incumbent minister
of health and is devoted to all that America symbolizes. After immigrating
to the United States in pursuit of higher education and the American
Dream, he becomes unwittingly entangled with American politics when he
meets Lindsey McAdams, the daughter of an influential, anti-immigration
senator. As the couple’s feelings grow, so too does the senator’s
animosity toward Kamao. Despite support from fellow immigrants Lazo,
Ayefumi, and Dania—who follow American Dreams of their own—Kamao soon
finds himself drawn into intrigues hidden from the American public that
make him question himself and his adopted country. When Kamao is
implicated in a murder, Lindsey’s loyalties are tested, Dania must decide
if she is willing to risk her own future and security for the sake of
justice, and Kamao discovers how far he’ll go to fulfill his American
Dream.
Kamao has spent his whole life dreaming of living in America. When he
finally is accepted to college and moves to begin his dream, his first
roommate in his first week makes him question whether it’s meant to be. But
he presses on, confident that most people are still good.
His optimism seems well placed going forward, as he meets a beautiful
classmate, and they both fall swiftly in love. Unfortunately, his heart is
too far gone when he realizes that Lindsey’s father is a renowned
anti-immigration senator. In the way perhaps only young people have such
unassailable confidence, they’re both sure their love can conquer all.
While Kamao’s main interest is his happy life with Lindsey, he also
continues to help others in the community of immigrants who have come to
feel like his family in America. They all experience struggles, but their
faith in the American dream never wanes.
The prologue of the book tells readers that Kamao ends up in prison, but the
story truly needs to be read to uncover how something so awful happens to
such a good man. The book earns 4 out of 5 stars and serves as an amazing
illustration of the struggles of life in America when one is in opposition
to those with privilege.
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Becki Bayley is the wife of a racecar guy and the mother of two amazing
kids. See what they’re up to on her Instagram, where she posts as
SweetlyBSquared.
GIVEAWAY:
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Enter via the widget below. Giveaway will end on
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Good luck!
Blindspot in America, by Elom K. Akoto
I want to read this book because it looks very intriguing. Thanks for sharing.
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