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In The End, It Was All About Love
In The End, It Was All About Love | Musa Okwonga
5 posts | 3 read | 5 to read
The narrator arrives in Berlin, a place famed for its hedonism, to find peace and maybe love; only to discover that the problems which have long haunted him have arrived there too, and are more present than ever. 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 fathers death. With the world as a whole more uncertain, as both the far-right and global temperatures rise at frightening speed, he finds himself fighting a fierce inner battle against his turbulent past, for a future free of his fear of failure, of persecution, and of intimacy. In The End, It Was All About Love is a journey of loss and self-acceptance that takes its nameless narrator all the way through bustling Berlin to his roots, a quiet village on the Uganda-Sudan border. It is a bracingly honest story of love, sexuality and spirituality, of racism, dating, and alienation; of fleeing the greatest possible pain, and of the hopeful road home.
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review
Kazzie
Pickpick

So beautiful! Very true observations. At times very funny. But sad and honest as well. Recommend!

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Bookwomble
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Pickpick

The unnamed narrator shares so much of his biography with the author that it's impossible not to read this as memoir, although it's published as fiction. Either way, it's a frank confessional about the internal life of the son of British immigrants, who leaves his UK family & relocates to Berlin, where he does find the change of life he was looking for, but not the connection with others or himself.
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Bookwomble Exploring friendship, dating, loneliness, racism, sexuality, and how these intersect with the MC's low self-esteem and depression, and the beginning of positive change through therapy and reconnection with his dead father's family in Uganda.
The language is wonderful, and if sad and revealing, because of these qualities it's also human and humane, and that's where connection happens.My only complaint is that at 122 pages, this was too short.
7mo
batsy This sounds great. I like his thoughts on football on twitter and he seems thoughtful; very different from the usual aggressively masculine, sexist stuff that passes off as analysis. 7mo
Bookwomble @batsy It is great ,I really enjoyed reading it 😊 If interest in a subject can be measured in negative percentages, then I'd rate my interest in football as -99%, so sadly his earlier books are not for me, but it's no surprise to hear you say that Musa's commentary is a cut above the typical punditry. He talks about the team he plays with in the book, and the support they give each other is what he emphasises. He has a football podcast, too. 7mo
batsy @Bookwomble Oh, that's so cool that he plays in a team and that he refers to it in the book. It definitely helps me understand the compassion with which he can talk about players, as more than commodities in the manner that most fans do. 7mo
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Bookwomble
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So this is the loneliness & Berlin is the best place to face it, as well as evade it. Because Berlin is essentially the end of the world at least as far as loneliness goes. This is the final stop on the train of solitude, the one where the conductor asks you all to change please, bitte aussteigen. There's nowhere you can go after this, nowhere more gentle, more brutal, no greater chaos, nowhere to be more gratefully anonymous. Thank God for Berlin

BarbaraBB Great quote. I guess the wall still stood there when this book was written 7mo
Bookwomble @BarbaraBB Berlin is a character in this book, for sure, though it was written in 2021 and is about the modern post-unification city. I think it reasonable to say that the author/MC brought their loneliness with them. 7mo
BarbaraBB Oow wow that makes it even more intriguing. And sad 7mo
The_Book_Ninja I worked in Berlin in 1998. Can‘t remember exactly where. but it was an old bus terminal, (classic, brutal concrete construction if that‘s not too clichéd) and it was used as a market in the day and a rave venue at night. I wish I kept a diary (edited) 7mo
Bookwomble @The_Book_Ninja I can't decide if that sounds exciting or bleak - or perhaps a bit of both 🤔 7mo
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Bookwomble
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"What happened to the winds that sent the slave ships?
Some of those gusts are proud that they filled those ancient sails.
You could hear them above Berlin on election night,
Hailing the arrival of the moonlight and far-right;
You could hear them whistling through the corridors
Of the Holocaust memorial, slapping its stone walls and floors,
Gasping applause."

The book opens with this powerful poem, "Righteous Migrants".

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Twocougs
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Pickpick

Fantastic read. Afro-Brit living in Berlin. Honest, authentic. Now my question is how much of this is about Omwonga‘s life and how much is fiction 😁

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