
It’s in her new home that Ijeoma meets Amina. Though Ijeoma is Igbo and Amina is Hausa, they quickly become friends and more. The girls stumble into a relationship that’s more than just friendship, it’s something undefinable, but from the reactions of the adults around them, they’re made to feel that it’s wrong. As we follow them through the years, we see the mental anguish that they’re subjected to because of their love for each other.
Though we’re never given insight into whether or not Amina makes the decision to abandon her love of Ijeoma herself or if it is forced upon her, the reader is a witness to Ijeoma’s story. From the intense Bible reading sessions with her mother, to her discovery of an underground group of women just like her, to her attempt to “go straight,” Under the Udala Trees is the story of the journey of one woman to become who she truly is in a country where whom she loves is illegal. Does she disappoint some people along the way, namely her mother and Chibundu? Perhaps. But in the end, she’s free and standing in her truth and that’s what matters most.

336 p.
Published: September 2015
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