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Send Her Back and Other Stories
Send Her Back and Other Stories | Munashe Kaseke
3 posts | 4 read
In Send Her Back and other stories, Munashe Kaseke offers an awfully intimate, fresh telling of the immigrant experience of black women in the United States. Equally awash with the joys of exploring a new world as well as a myriad of challenges, her complicated, and often tangled, female Zimbabwean protagonists navigate issues of identity, microaggressions, and sexism in vibrant, indelible settings. Yet again, these are not only stories of navigating an at times tense US political climate, they are also marked by characters who rise to the top of their professional fields, seize the American dream, and travel the world in glee. Kaseke peels back on the inner wranglings of characters caught between two worlds, be it by stories of dating outside one's culture and race or failing to assimilate upon returning home after spending time abroad. Uncanny. Witty. Gripping. Send Her Back and other stories dazzles, leaving you newly awakened to the world we live in.
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Read_By_Red
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Pickpick

This is an informative, entertaining, and interesting collection of short stories that expertly reveal to the reader the struggles faced by many in this country, specifically black, immigrant women. It also shows that we hope and strive towards the same things. I enjoyed the audiobook; the narration effectively drew me into the stories. I liked hearing about Shona culture and listening to the language/words sprinkled throughout the various tales.

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Hana321
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This is a batch of stories inspired by one woman‘s experience as an immigrant from Zimbabwe. The stories are fictional, but they ring true, and can be raw and painful, or joyous. Whether they are true or not, these stories remind us all of the potential of those looking to make the US home, if they are only given the chance.

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TheBiasedBibliophile
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I was impressed to see that this is Kaseke‘s debut book, because she writes as if she has been doing so for her entire life. Few authors have the ability to evoke such strong emotions in readers, but after reading this book, I have no doubt that Kaseke clearly has that talent. Even if Kaseke never wrote another book in her life, Send Her Back is an amazing feat, the likes of which most authors strive for just once in their lives!