Quartey’s most personal crime novel asks Emma Djan and her colleagues at the Sowah detective agency to figure out who’s running through Accra’s LGBTQ+ community silencing its loudest voices.
Even before he’s killed, Marcelo Tetteh has already paid a high price for his activism. When he speaks out at a rally of the right-wing International Congress of Families, he’s grabbed by security officers, and his community is targeted by an aggressive new series of anti-gay laws backed by ICF leader Christopher Cortland; Peter Ansah, the minister of tourism, arts, and culture; and their allies in the ultraconservative religious and government communities. So it’s shocking but not entirely surprising when he’s hacked to death by what forensic evidence indicates are two assailants. Godfrey Tetteh, his grieving father, wants the Sowah Agency to identify his killers, who may also have executed Marcelo’s co-worker and friend Abraham Quao. So Yemo Sowah, the agency’s founder and owner, sends Emma and Jojo Ayitey undercover to infiltrate the ICF. Jojo backs out because he’s a closeted gay man who doesn’t want his identity to compromise the investigation, or vice versa. But his reticence doesn’t protect him from getting arrested for the murder of famous transgender singer Henrietta Blay, who’s killed before she can talk to Emma. It’s hard to tell whether the murders are the work of a single mastermind or a wave of vigilantes because the public stance throughout Ghana is so horrendously anti-LGBTQ+. Even though the persecutors’ obvious hypocrisy makes them all look guilty, Quartey manages to produce a culprit who’ll surprise most readers.
Murder is only the tip of a ferociously toxic iceberg.