This Mansfield Park retelling follows the trials and tribulations of two cousins—one Nigerian, one English—from 1978 to 1992.
Ten-year-old Oluwafunke Oyenuga enjoys a happy life in Lagos with her Nigerian father, Babatunde; her English mother, Lizzie; and her little brother, Femi. Though Funke loves hearing stories about Lizzie’s youth in Somerset and the “magical palace” called The Ring where her mother was raised, Funke has never met her family there. Lizzie’s parents disapproved of her marriage to Babatunde, and her sister, Margot, spurned Lizzie after her fiance jilted her due to the scandal. But when a car crash claims Lizzie and Femi’s lives, Funke is sent to England, where she quickly discovers that her mother’s idyllic tales don’t live up to the reality. Her grandparents are distant, her aunt Margot is often outright hateful, and The Ring is cold, gray, and dilapidated. The only bright spot in Funke’s new life is her cousin, Liv. Free-spirited and good-natured, Liv seems to be as different from the rest of the Stone family as Funke is. The two girls become fast friends and remain true allies throughout their teen years, during which Liv gives Funke a new Anglo name, Kate. But when their grown-up ambitions—Kate plans to attend university in Bristol; Liv is hoping to be “discovered” in London—set their lives on different courses and tragedy finds the family once more, the cousins are torn apart. Can they right generational wrongs, or will the specter of loss continue to haunt them? Frequent time jumps sometimes make it difficult to fully connect with the characters, but the author is gifted at bringing her settings to vibrant life. The heat and humidity of crowded Lagos sizzles off the page, while the gray clouds and isolation of Somerset perfectly mirror the suffocating expectations of legacy, culture, and identity that Kate and Liv face.
A meaningful modern tale of becoming, belonging, and the ties that bind.