10% off all books and free delivery over £40 - Last Express Posting Date for Christmas: 20th December
Buy from our bookstore and 25% of the cover price will be given to a school of your choice to buy more books. *15% of eBooks.

Rootless

"Love, marriage, motherhood, family obligations and selfhood — this moving portrait of a marriage moves between London and Ghana to present an extraordinary story of a couple’s intertwined lives."

View All Editions

Available now from Audiobooks.com. Start your free trial today. Buy from Audiobooks.com
Add To Wishlist
Write A Review

LoveReading Says

LoveReading Says

Prefaced by a Ghanaian proverb: “Marriage is like a groundnut. You have to crack them to see what is inside”, Krystle Zara Appiah’s Rootless is a moving, unexpected love story set between London and Ghana. With a gripping structure that starts near the end before switching to a couple’s origin story and moving forward at increasingly feverish pace, it’s a fine page-turner of a debut with a heart-stopping climax.

The story begins just as Efe has gone to Ghana, leaving her husband Sam with their toddler daughter. Then we’re transported back nineteen years to 1997, when Efe and her sister arrive in London from Ghana to finish their schooling, and to the moment Efe first meets Sam. After finishing school, he reads law at Cambridge, while Efe stays in London and struggles with Economics, a subject deemed suitable by her parents, especially her vocal mother. In contrast, Sam has lived most of his life without his mother — she left his family to work as a singer when he was a boy.

After years of friendship, Efe and Sam get together and marry, though she’s not entirely sure they want the same things, especially when it comes to having kids. As things turn out, and despite Sam’s promises, Efe does the bulk of domestic work and has to care for his father after he has a stroke, putting her career on hold while she supports Sam’s burgeoning photography career. Efe’s struggles with loneliness, lack of fulfilment and responsibilities as a carer are palpable. Pertinently, when Sam meets his mother after years apart, she shares the reason she never came home: “I couldn’t face my life”.

Taking in the pull between selfhood, motherhood and family obligations, this is a tender, thoughtful love story, with a tremendously moving conclusion.

Joanne Owen

Audiobooks of the Month

Find This Book In

Primary Genre Literary Fiction
Other Genres:
Recommendations:

About

Press Reviews

Collections Featuring This Book

You Might Also Like...

Liars

Sarah Manguso

Hardback

In Stock

£15.29 £16.99

Blue Sisters

Coco Mellors

Hardback

In Stock

£15.29 £16.99

Six Lives

Lavie Tidhar

Hardback

In Stock

£18.00 £20.00

Beside the Ocean of Time

George Mackay Brown

Paperback

Temporarily Out Of Stock

£8.99 £9.99

The Interview

J. David Simons

Paperback

In Stock

£8.99 £9.99

Kassandra and the Wolf

Margarita Karapanou

Paperback

In Stock

£15.29 £16.99