Musa Okwonga - In The End, It Was All About Love

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Musa Okwonga - In The End, It Was All About Love

Musa Okwonga - In The End, It Was All About Love

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I have a great interest in Berlin, and am also keen to enlarge my reading of authors of colour, so this was a serendipitous find at my local library. Yes, the earnestness did sometimes leave me feeling browbeaten into suppressing doubts over the precise value added by the modishly autofictional form. In The End, It Was All About Love is a powerful novel by Musa Okwonga by poet, journalist, musician and author Musa Okwonga, and published by Rough Trade books. It is the work of stopping and listening and caring, and you make a note not to get distracted from it too often in future. Surely any big city can do this and it rather depends on what you personally bring to a place in terms of expectations and hope.

In the end, it was all about love. – poco.lit. In the end, it was all about love. – poco.lit.

As I said earlier if someone uses the third person and I enjoy it then this book is truly something special. As he approaches his fortieth birthday, nearing the age where his father was killed in a brutal revolution, he drifts through this endlessly addictive and sometimes mystical city, through its slow days and bottomless nights, wondering whether he will ever escape the damage left by his father’s death.I don't really want to critcise this as the author has clearly poured his life blood into this, but it just wasn't the book for me. I had no idea what time of day it was; I just slept when I was tired, and worked on this song until it took shape. As the episode ends, Ae-jeong is on the phone talking about the film, and then she sees Dae-o and she is stunned. By using the Web site, you confirm that you have read, understood, and agreed to be bound by the Terms and Conditions.

In the End, It Was All About Love by Musa Okwonga review

Considering that Annie Ernaux’s brief memoirs have dominated my reading over the last few weeks, I am in awe of the author who manages to squeeze a lot of topics using a limited about of space. Even so, when the protagonist points out how poorly he was paid for his most successful articles (“not necessarily those which were most widely shared”, he clarifies, “but those which contributed to the national or even global conversation”), it’s hard not to detect at least a batsqueak of humblebrag. Sometimes – as in his delineation of the fear that comes with being a Black person living in Germany – this is especially heart-wrenching. But now, with each passing year, your identity is being divided up, with each element progressively more dangerous. palomar" by italo calvino vibes, which I loved: this narrative description that presents us with a subtly different and mindful way of perceiving the events around us and our actions.

Movies, series and books about Berlin – no one will tell you so precisely about how is it to live here like Okwonga did. Okwonga's way of writng about Berlin strikes me more as a universal migration experience, with all the fears and hopes that entails.

In The End, It Was All About Love — Julian Girdham In The End, It Was All About Love — Julian Girdham

Sophie Passmann hat mit »Pick me girls« nicht nur ihr persönlichstes Buch geschrieben, sondern auch eine kluge Auseinandersetzung mit dem männlichen Blick. They are moral because love for another is openly acknowledged rather than hidden in the secret of an affair.The anxiety this causes is an undercurrent throughout his life: he dreads it, yet needs it to come, to confront and (he hopes) overcome it. Okwonga's words cut deep into the heart to leave an indelible mark that becomes part of the reader, shaking the soul. I just moved to Berlin, so this book had added appeal for me--a reminder that I have chosen to live in a complex and remarkable city. It isn’t a novel, though it does pursue a single character’s development to trace, in some measure, an arc of coming-to-terms. Love is about losing control, being swept off your feet, having no say in who you fall for (even if they are violent).

In the End, It Was All About Love (with Musa Okwonga) In the End, It Was All About Love (with Musa Okwonga)

There are only two states where you have ever felt safe: when you had money and when you had love, and you have never really had much of either. The book is divided into small vignette style pieces, all focusing on a different section of the author’s life in Berlin and his past actions in London and Uganda. The co-host of the Stadio football podcast, he has published one collection of poetry and three books about football, the first of which, A Cultured Left Foot, was nominated for the 2008 William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award. Musa Okwonga is also a poet and there are some poets which also express the author’s feelings about Berlin.The lack of specificity when taking about the city (why not name your favourite cafes if you're already writing a chapter on them? p>

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