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On Black Sisters' Street
 
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On Black Sisters' Street (Paperback)

by Chika Unigwe (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
RRP: £12.99
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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd (2 Jul 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0224085301
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224085304
  • Product Dimensions: 21.4 x 13.4 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 39,406 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Review

Sisi, Ama, Efe and Joyce are prostitutes, illegally trafficked imto Antwerp to profit the unctuous Dele. The action pivots around the house on Zwarterzusterstraat, where the young women share their lives under the watchful eyes of their Madam and her baleful aide Segun.

As illegal workers in Belgium, the women concealed their true names and pasts even from eachother. It takes the murder of the most enigmatic of the group, Sisi, the shock Ams, Efe and Joyce into revealing their true selves. The women's narratives reveal histories torn apart by war, sexual abuse and family breakdown. Poverty made the women vulnerable to solicitous attentions of Dele, and the desperate desire to escape their circumstances for the mirage of an affluent new life in the West.

At times heartbreaking and disturbingly graohic, On Black Sisters' Street is ultimately a story of female strength and resilience. With the narrative interpersed with African turn of phrase, the book draws on a rich oral story telling tradition to illuminate on the West from a under-represented perspective. --Aesthetica Magazine (Samantha Cracknell)

`lively and engaging...Unigwe has a good ear for idiosyncratic language...fast-paced, lucidly structured and colourful.' --TLS

Gritty --FT



Review

Not many novelists would wander around the seedy red-light district of Antwerp in a mini-skirt and thigh-high boots to carry out research. But this is what Nigerian writer Chika Unigwe did for her novel about the lives of African sex workers in the Belgian city. She also spent time persuading these women to share their stories.

Her diligence has paid off. On Black Sisters' Street is a probing and unsettling exploration of the many factors that lead African women into prostitution in Europe, and it pulls no punches about the sordid nature of the job. Four naive young women, Sisi, Joyce, Ama and Efe, fall under the money-making spell of pimp-daddy "Senghor Dele" in Lagos.

Rich, vulgar, ruthless, he specialises in exporting girls to work in Belgium for a modest fee of 30,000 euros. This they must pay back in monthly instalments over many years of turning tricks ten hours a day. They don't all know that this is what lies in store but, fake passports withheld, the consequences for those who try to escape are dire.

Sisi, around whom most of the novel's suspense revolves, is an ambitious graduate unable to find suitable work. Efe is a teenage mother struggling to raise her son with no support from his father. Ama has escaped an abusive childhood only to find her dream of escaping Nigeria crushed by a dead-end job. Joyce, without family, home or money, is abandoned by her boyfriend. The women's dreams come in different sizes, from financial support for struggling relatives back home to the allure of big houses, fancy cars, gold jewellery and expensive plait extensions.

Unigwe's vigorous prose is at its best when describing the utter humiliation Sisi feels when forced to dress like a hooker in "a gold-coloured nylon skirt" that rode up her legs when she walked and "showed her butt cheeks when she bent". So too with the degradation of her first encounter with a client in a toilet: "She baptised herself into it with tears, hot and livid, down her cheeks, salty in her mouth, feeling intense pain wherever he touched, like he was searing her with a razor blade that had just come off a fire".

Men in this novel are generally drunks, murderers, rapists, weak, cold-hearted, pathetic - although Unigwe avoids the fallacy of women as passive victims. Hers make choices, for which there are consequences. But their choices are restricted by circumstance and the Lagos they leave behind is a harsh place to survive, where "on any given day one was likely to find a corpse abandoned by the roadside".

She shows what the women become, too. Sisi, who felt she was living the dream on her first day in Belgium because she was eating jam, can "no longer bear to look at herself", while Efe's plan is to run her own brothel one day when she has paid of her debt. What Unigwe does brilliantly is to delve into the psychology of each woman, eliciting different levels of empathy.

This is an important and accomplished novel that leaves a strong aftertaste. Unigwe gives voice to those who are voiceless, fleshes out the stories of those who offer themselves as meat for sale, and bestows dignity on those who are stripped off it.


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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unputdownable, 12 Jul 2009
By MotoWey "Tola" (Donauwörth Germany) - See all my reviews
Chika Unigwe who lives and writes from Turnhout in Belgium. Ms Unigwe is a very talented writer and this is her second novel. Her first one, De Feniks was published in Dutch/Flemish but is also available as 'The Phoenix' in English. Unfortunately, you have to walk through Murtala Mohammed Airport in Lagos to obtain a copy or simply ask your Nigerian friends or relatives to get it for you. Her second book though is available via Amazon.co.uk. I ordered and got mine and have not regretted buying it. Ms Unigwe writes about the lives some of our sisters live in Europe. Exactly. Prostituting or better still, being sex workers. She breathes life into their existence; as most of them are not registered as citizens at all. 'Persona non grata', that is their status. So that when they die of some act of violence, they end up being buried like paupers in a country which never embraced them.

Sisi, Efe, Ama and Joyce alongside with their Madam who doesn't walk but barrels through rooms and spaces are the inhabitants of the flat on Zwartezusterstraat, which is the Black Sisters' Street in Dutch. Madam is a modern day 'Slaventreiber', a female pimp who has lost the spirit of compassion towards other human beings, especially black women. She is an excellent business woman though. Excellent in the marketing and selling of human bodies, preferably black female bodies. Ms Unigwe excellently tells of the lives of these women before Belgium and we eventually find out that they all, alongside with many other women have a common 'pimp' in Lagos Nigeria. When we see men or women of extreme wealth in Lagos and we do not see them sweat for it or go to a 9-5 job daily, we should beware. The reader gets to know the women by and by and it is thanks to Ms Unigwe's first class story telling that the book can be categorized as 'unputdownable'. I sure couldn't do anything else in my free time but continue reading until I came to the end. Although one of the women dies, the lives of the others went on to become something useful to their different societies from their countries of origin.

The lesson learned here is 'never judge a book by its cover' We shouldn't judge our sisters in the sex trade until we have walked a mile or two in their shoes. Pick up this book today, read it during your summer break and you will discover that it is money well spent.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars On Black Sisters Street, 12 Jul 2009
By Hans Schippers - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This is a brilliantly written book telling the story of a group of people who, if given any attention at all, are generally frowned upon: African prostitutes, lured by European wealth. This book gives them a human face, and more importantly, a human voice. It allows the reader to bypass his own prejudices and crawl into the skin of those not blessed with the luxury of shame. It reveals the strength it takes not only to survive but even to carry the weight of their relatives on their shoulders. It shows that every situation should be placed into its rightful perspective. Highly recommended!
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5.0 out of 5 stars A must read, 8 Oct 2009
This novel is excellent. The story line is gripping and delves into the lives and difficulties faced by immigrant girls who come with hopes and dreams that eventually come crashing.

Its a must read for anyone who is keen to know more about African ladies in the red light districts across Europe.

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