<p><i><b>'</b></i><b>This story of love, loss and resilient female friendship is a definite must read.'</b><br> Tola Rotimi Abraham, author of <i>Black Sunday</i><br><br><b>'Aiwanose Odafen's novel has entered popular feminist discourse.' </b><i>Afrocritik</i><br><br> On a Sunday in 1978, Obianuju meets Chigozie at church - the perfect place for an upstanding girl to find a husband. Uju is in her last months studying economics at the University of Lagos; Gozie is a journalist ten years her senior. Crucially, he is Igbo and meets her mother's approval. Months later, they are married, and Uju's life is set on a new course.<br><br> Over the next two decades, Uju and her friends Adaugo and Chinelo must navigate traumas both personal and political as they learn how to live on their own terms in a traditional society beset by turmoil.<br><br><i>Tomorrow I Become a Woman</i> is a nuanced and powerful story of friendship and resilience, set against the backdrop of a fast-changing Nigeria.<br><br><b>'Searing and beautifully rendered.'</b><br> Koa Beck, author of <i>White Feminism</i><br><br><b>'Unflinching and cuts to the core.'</b><br> Chika Unigwe, author of <i>On Black Sisters Street</i><br><br><b>'An accomplished and emotional triumph.'</b><br> Louise Beech, author of <i>How To Be Brave</i></p>
Ecology is the science of how organisms interact with each other and with their environment to form communities and ecosystems. This book explains the principles of ecological thinking, how ecology affects our everyday lives, and how it guides environmental policy, especially in the light of current and future environmental challenges.
No masters. No limits. No regrets. In this fourth book in the #1 New York Times bestselling Throne of Glass series, no one will escape the queen's wrath.