The Girl with the Louding Voice

The Girl with the Louding Voice

by

Abi Daré

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on The Girl with the Louding Voice makes teaching easy.
Adunni is the protagonist and narrator of The Girl with the Louding Voice. She is an intelligent, feisty, and determined 14-year-old girl from Ikati, a rural village in Nigeria. In the beginning of the novel Papa forces her to marry a much older, abusive man named Morufu in exchange for food and rent money. Papa’s decision horrifies Adunni, as her life’s dream is to get an education and become a teacher, values that were instilled in her by Mama, who died shortly before start of the novel. Before she died, Mama told Adunni that education would be her “voice,” the thing that would give her a sense of power and self-worth that nobody could take away from her. From that day forth, Adunni vows to achieve what she calls a “louding voice,” or a voice that conveys her sense of strength intelligence, and confidence. Adunni’s marriage also forces her to leave her younger brother, Kayus, with whom she is very close. Despite the limitations imposed on her by her gender, class status, and lack of a formal education, Adunni does everything in her power to find her louding voice, approaching each day with curiosity and openness. She eventually escapes Morufu but is tricked into becoming an indentured servant for Big Madam and Big Daddy. Here, a kind woman named Ms. Tia gives Adunni English lessons, and Adunni also learns independently by reading books she finds in Big Madam’s house. Other women, most notably Khadija (another one of Morufu’s wives) and Ms. Tia play a critical role in supporting and encouraging Adunni to value herself, pursue her education, and find her voice. In turn, she uses her voice to bring to light the mystery of Rebecca, Big Madam’s former housemaid who disappeared before Adunni’s arrival. By the end of the novel, through the support of these women and her own strength, Adunni wins the Ocean Oil scholarship, which allows her to leave her job at Big Madam’s house receive the education that she has dreamed of for so many years.

Adunni Quotes in The Girl with the Louding Voice

The The Girl with the Louding Voice quotes below are all either spoken by Adunni or refer to Adunni. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Education, Empowerment, and Self-Worth Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

I taste the salt of my tears at the memorying of it all, and when I go back to my mat and close my eyes, I see Mama as a rose flower. But this rose is no more having yellow and red and purple colors with shining leafs. This flower be the brown of a wet leaf that suffer a stamping from the dirty feets of a man that forget the promise he make to his dead wife.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

“Adunni, you know how this is a good thing for your family. Think about how you been suffering since your mama[…]. I know it is not what you want. I know you like school, but think it well, Adunni. Think of how your family will be better because of it. Even if I beg your papa, you know he will not answer me. I swear, if I can find a man like Morufu to marry me, I will be too happy!”

Related Characters: Enitan (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Page Number: 20
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

“In this village, if you go to school, no one will be forcing you to marry any man. But if you didn’t go to school, they will marry you to any man once you are reaching fifteen years old. Your schooling is your voice, child. It will be speaking for you even if you didn’t open your mouth to talk. It will be speaking till the day God is calling you come.”

Related Characters: Mama (Idowu) (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Papa, Ade
Page Number: 24-25
Explanation and Analysis:

That day, I tell myself that even if I am not getting anything in this life, I will go to school. I will finish my primary and secondary and university schooling and become teacher because I don’t just want to be having any kind voice…I want a louding voice.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 25
Explanation and Analysis:

“There is no money for food, talk less of thirty thousan’ for community rent. What will becoming teacher do for you? Nothing. Only stubborn head it will give you.”

Related Characters: Papa (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Sometimes, I want to be just like Kayus, to have no fear of marrying a man, to not have any worry in this life. All Kayus ever worry about is what food to eat and where he can kick his football. He don’t ever worry about no marriage or bride-price money. He don’t even worry about schooling because I been the one teaching him school since all this time.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Papa, Kayus, Labake
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

My wedding be like watching a movie inside the tee-vee. My eyes was watching myself as I was kneeling down in front of my father, as he was saying a prayer to be following me to my husband house, as my mouth was opening, my lips parting, my voice saying “Amen” to the prayers even though my mind was not understanding what is happening to me.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Papa
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“Your dead mother and me, we are age-mates. God forbid for me to share my husband with my own child. God forbid that I am waiting for you to finish with my husband before I can enter his room. Ah, you will suffer in this house. Ask Khadija, she will tell you that I am a wicked woman. That my madness is not having cure.”

Related Characters: Labake (speaker), Adunni, Khadija, Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 45
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

I cannot remember many of what happen to me last night, my head is full of a dark cloth, blocking every of the evil Morufu was doing[…].”

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

“When you begin to born your children, you will not be too sad again,” she say. “When I first marry Morufu, I didn’t want to born children. I was too afraid of having a baby so quick, afraid of falling sick from the load of it. So I take something, a medicine, to stop the pregnant from coming. But after two months, I say to myself, ‘Khadija, if you don’t born a baby, Morufu will send you back to your father’s house.’ So I stop the medicine and soon I born my first girl, Alafia. When I hold her in my hands for the first time, my heart was full of so much love. Now, my children make me laugh when I am not even thinking to laugh. Children are joy, Adunni. Real joy.”

Related Characters: Khadija (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Labake, Alafia
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

She open her eyes, give me a sad smile. “I wish I am a man, but I am not, so I do the next thing I can do. I marry a man.”

Related Characters: Kike (speaker), Adunni, Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija, Labake, Baba Ogun
Page Number: 75
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

I am leaving Ikati. This is what I been wanting all my life, to leave this place and see what the world outside is looking like, but not like this. Not with a bad name following me. Not like a person that the whole village is looking for because they think she have kill a woman. Not with one half of my heart with Kayus and the other half with Khadija. I hang my head down, feeling a thick, heavy cloth as it is covering me. The thick cloth of shame, of sorrow, of heart pain.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Khadija, Kayus, Kola, Iya
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

When she come out, she draw deep breath and her chest, wide like blackboard, is climbing up and down, up and down. It is as if this woman is using her nostrils to be collecting all the heating from the outside and making us to be catching cold. I am standing beside Mr. Kola, and his body is shaking like my own. Even the trees in the compound, the yellow, pink, blue flowers in the long flowerpot, all of them too are shaking.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Khadija, Mama (Idowu), Kola, Iya
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 144
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

I am not understanding why Kofi is always saying Nigerians are spending this and that when him too, he is using the Nigerians money to be building his house in his Ghana country. I see when the visitors of Big Madam give him money, how he will squeeze it tight and slide it inside his pocket with a big smile and a big thank you. Why didn’t he refuse the money if it is thief money? He too is among the problem wrong with Nigeria.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Kofi
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 30 Quotes

Honest, honest, I never hear of a adult woman not wanting childrens in my life. In my village, all the adult womens are having childrens, and if the baby is not coming, maybe because of a sickness, then their husband will marry another woman on top of them and the adult woman will be caring for another woman’s baby so that she don’t feel any shame.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Ms. Tia’s Mother
Page Number: 203
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 34 Quotes

I didn’t tell Ms. Tia that I ever marry Morufu or about all the things he did to me in the room after he drink Fire-Cracker. I didn’t tell her about what happen to Khadija. I didn’t tell her because I have to keep it inside one box in my mind, lock the box, and throw the key inside river of my soul. Maybe one day, I will swim inside the river, find the key.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Khadija, Morufu
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 222
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 35 Quotes

“She comes to ask if I am pregnant,” she say. “Can you imagine that? She has come every month in the last six months to say: ‘Where are my grandchildren? When will I carry my grandchildren and dance with them?’ Like I’ve hidden them in an attic somewhere. If she wants to dance, she should go to a bloody nightclub.”

Related Characters: Ms. Tia/Tia Dada (speaker), Adunni, Kenneth Dada/The Doctor, Doctor Mama
Page Number: 233
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 39 Quotes

How is Morufu and Big Daddy different from each other? One can speak good English, and the other doesn’t speak good English, but both of them have the same terrible sickness of the mind.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Morufu, Rebecca
Page Number: 251
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 41 Quotes

“God has given you all you need to be great, and it sits right there inside of you. […] Right inside your mind, in your heart. You believe, I know you do. You just need to hold on to that belief and never let go. When you get up every day, I want you to remind yourself that tomorrow will be better than today. That you are a person of value. That you are important. You must believe this, regardless of what happens with the scholarship. Okay?

Related Characters: Ms. Tia/Tia Dada (speaker), Adunni, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 264
Explanation and Analysis:

I tear to pieces the paper, and throw it to the floor. Then I swim deep inside the river of my soul, find the key from where it is sitting, full of rust, at the bottom of the river, and open the lock. I kneel down beside my bed, close my eyes, turn myself into a cup, and pour the memory out of me.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 275
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 42 Quotes

Fifteen years ago, I was selling cheap materials from my boot, going from place to place, looking for customers. I wasn’t born into wealth. I have worked hard for my success. I fought for it. It wasn’t easy, especially because my husband, Chief, he didn’t have a job. If you want to be like me in business, Adunni, you will need to work very hard. Rise about whatever life throws at you. And never, ever give up on your dreams. Do you understand?”

Related Characters: Big Madam (Florence Adeoti) (speaker), Adunni, Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Khadija, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 285
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 43 Quotes

“Why don’t you wait till we get to church so you can take the microphone and announce to the congregation that you gave your husband, the head of the family, the man in charge of your home, two hundred thousand naira for retreat, and that he spent the money? Useless woman.”

Related Characters: Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti) (speaker), Adunni, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti)
Page Number: 288
Explanation and Analysis:

I step inside, see about five girls sitting on the floor, their head down. They all look the same age of me: fourteen, fifteen. All are wearing dirty dress of ankara or plain material with shoes like wet toilet paper, tearing everywhere. Hair is rough, or low-cut to the scalp. They smell of stinking sweat, of a body that needs serious washing, and they all look sad, lost, afraid. Like me. […] One of the girls look up then, hook her eyes on me. There is no kindness in her eyes. Nothing. Only fear. Cold fear. She say nothing, but with her eyes, she seem to be saying: You are me. I am you. Our madams are different, but they are the same.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker)
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 291
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 47 Quotes

But there are words in my head, many things I want to say. I want to tell Ms. Tia I am sorry I made her come here. I want to ask why the doctor didn’t come too. Why didn’t he come and get a beating like his wife? If it takes two people to make a baby, why only one person, the woman, is suffering when the baby is not coming? Is it because she is the one with breast and the stomach for being pregnant? Or because of what? I want to ask, to scream, why are the women in Nigeria seem to be suffering for everything more than the men?

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija, Kenneth Dada/The Doctor, Doctor Mama, The Birth-Makers
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 312
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 55 Quotes

I leave the room, closing the door on the memory of the sad and the bitter and the happy of it all, knowing that even if everybody forgets about Rebecca, or about me, the wall in the room we shared will remind them that we were here. That we are human. Of value. Important.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Rebecca, Mama (Idowu)
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 361
Explanation and Analysis:
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Adunni Quotes in The Girl with the Louding Voice

The The Girl with the Louding Voice quotes below are all either spoken by Adunni or refer to Adunni. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Education, Empowerment, and Self-Worth Theme Icon
).
Chapter 2 Quotes

I taste the salt of my tears at the memorying of it all, and when I go back to my mat and close my eyes, I see Mama as a rose flower. But this rose is no more having yellow and red and purple colors with shining leafs. This flower be the brown of a wet leaf that suffer a stamping from the dirty feets of a man that forget the promise he make to his dead wife.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Page Number: 10
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

“Adunni, you know how this is a good thing for your family. Think about how you been suffering since your mama[…]. I know it is not what you want. I know you like school, but think it well, Adunni. Think of how your family will be better because of it. Even if I beg your papa, you know he will not answer me. I swear, if I can find a man like Morufu to marry me, I will be too happy!”

Related Characters: Enitan (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Page Number: 20
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

“In this village, if you go to school, no one will be forcing you to marry any man. But if you didn’t go to school, they will marry you to any man once you are reaching fifteen years old. Your schooling is your voice, child. It will be speaking for you even if you didn’t open your mouth to talk. It will be speaking till the day God is calling you come.”

Related Characters: Mama (Idowu) (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Papa, Ade
Page Number: 24-25
Explanation and Analysis:

That day, I tell myself that even if I am not getting anything in this life, I will go to school. I will finish my primary and secondary and university schooling and become teacher because I don’t just want to be having any kind voice…I want a louding voice.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 25
Explanation and Analysis:

“There is no money for food, talk less of thirty thousan’ for community rent. What will becoming teacher do for you? Nothing. Only stubborn head it will give you.”

Related Characters: Papa (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 26-27
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

Sometimes, I want to be just like Kayus, to have no fear of marrying a man, to not have any worry in this life. All Kayus ever worry about is what food to eat and where he can kick his football. He don’t ever worry about no marriage or bride-price money. He don’t even worry about schooling because I been the one teaching him school since all this time.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Papa, Kayus, Labake
Page Number: 34
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

My wedding be like watching a movie inside the tee-vee. My eyes was watching myself as I was kneeling down in front of my father, as he was saying a prayer to be following me to my husband house, as my mouth was opening, my lips parting, my voice saying “Amen” to the prayers even though my mind was not understanding what is happening to me.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Papa
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 36
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

“Your dead mother and me, we are age-mates. God forbid for me to share my husband with my own child. God forbid that I am waiting for you to finish with my husband before I can enter his room. Ah, you will suffer in this house. Ask Khadija, she will tell you that I am a wicked woman. That my madness is not having cure.”

Related Characters: Labake (speaker), Adunni, Khadija, Morufu, Mama (Idowu), Papa
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 45
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

I cannot remember many of what happen to me last night, my head is full of a dark cloth, blocking every of the evil Morufu was doing[…].”

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Morufu, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

“When you begin to born your children, you will not be too sad again,” she say. “When I first marry Morufu, I didn’t want to born children. I was too afraid of having a baby so quick, afraid of falling sick from the load of it. So I take something, a medicine, to stop the pregnant from coming. But after two months, I say to myself, ‘Khadija, if you don’t born a baby, Morufu will send you back to your father’s house.’ So I stop the medicine and soon I born my first girl, Alafia. When I hold her in my hands for the first time, my heart was full of so much love. Now, my children make me laugh when I am not even thinking to laugh. Children are joy, Adunni. Real joy.”

Related Characters: Khadija (speaker), Adunni, Morufu, Labake, Alafia
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

She open her eyes, give me a sad smile. “I wish I am a man, but I am not, so I do the next thing I can do. I marry a man.”

Related Characters: Kike (speaker), Adunni, Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija, Labake, Baba Ogun
Page Number: 75
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

I am leaving Ikati. This is what I been wanting all my life, to leave this place and see what the world outside is looking like, but not like this. Not with a bad name following me. Not like a person that the whole village is looking for because they think she have kill a woman. Not with one half of my heart with Kayus and the other half with Khadija. I hang my head down, feeling a thick, heavy cloth as it is covering me. The thick cloth of shame, of sorrow, of heart pain.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Khadija, Kayus, Kola, Iya
Page Number: 130
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

When she come out, she draw deep breath and her chest, wide like blackboard, is climbing up and down, up and down. It is as if this woman is using her nostrils to be collecting all the heating from the outside and making us to be catching cold. I am standing beside Mr. Kola, and his body is shaking like my own. Even the trees in the compound, the yellow, pink, blue flowers in the long flowerpot, all of them too are shaking.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Khadija, Mama (Idowu), Kola, Iya
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 144
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

I am not understanding why Kofi is always saying Nigerians are spending this and that when him too, he is using the Nigerians money to be building his house in his Ghana country. I see when the visitors of Big Madam give him money, how he will squeeze it tight and slide it inside his pocket with a big smile and a big thank you. Why didn’t he refuse the money if it is thief money? He too is among the problem wrong with Nigeria.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Kofi
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 182
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 30 Quotes

Honest, honest, I never hear of a adult woman not wanting childrens in my life. In my village, all the adult womens are having childrens, and if the baby is not coming, maybe because of a sickness, then their husband will marry another woman on top of them and the adult woman will be caring for another woman’s baby so that she don’t feel any shame.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Ms. Tia’s Mother
Page Number: 203
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 34 Quotes

I didn’t tell Ms. Tia that I ever marry Morufu or about all the things he did to me in the room after he drink Fire-Cracker. I didn’t tell her about what happen to Khadija. I didn’t tell her because I have to keep it inside one box in my mind, lock the box, and throw the key inside river of my soul. Maybe one day, I will swim inside the river, find the key.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Khadija, Morufu
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 222
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 35 Quotes

“She comes to ask if I am pregnant,” she say. “Can you imagine that? She has come every month in the last six months to say: ‘Where are my grandchildren? When will I carry my grandchildren and dance with them?’ Like I’ve hidden them in an attic somewhere. If she wants to dance, she should go to a bloody nightclub.”

Related Characters: Ms. Tia/Tia Dada (speaker), Adunni, Kenneth Dada/The Doctor, Doctor Mama
Page Number: 233
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 39 Quotes

How is Morufu and Big Daddy different from each other? One can speak good English, and the other doesn’t speak good English, but both of them have the same terrible sickness of the mind.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Morufu, Rebecca
Page Number: 251
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 41 Quotes

“God has given you all you need to be great, and it sits right there inside of you. […] Right inside your mind, in your heart. You believe, I know you do. You just need to hold on to that belief and never let go. When you get up every day, I want you to remind yourself that tomorrow will be better than today. That you are a person of value. That you are important. You must believe this, regardless of what happens with the scholarship. Okay?

Related Characters: Ms. Tia/Tia Dada (speaker), Adunni, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 264
Explanation and Analysis:

I tear to pieces the paper, and throw it to the floor. Then I swim deep inside the river of my soul, find the key from where it is sitting, full of rust, at the bottom of the river, and open the lock. I kneel down beside my bed, close my eyes, turn myself into a cup, and pour the memory out of me.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 275
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 42 Quotes

Fifteen years ago, I was selling cheap materials from my boot, going from place to place, looking for customers. I wasn’t born into wealth. I have worked hard for my success. I fought for it. It wasn’t easy, especially because my husband, Chief, he didn’t have a job. If you want to be like me in business, Adunni, you will need to work very hard. Rise about whatever life throws at you. And never, ever give up on your dreams. Do you understand?”

Related Characters: Big Madam (Florence Adeoti) (speaker), Adunni, Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti), Khadija, Mama (Idowu)
Page Number: 285
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 43 Quotes

“Why don’t you wait till we get to church so you can take the microphone and announce to the congregation that you gave your husband, the head of the family, the man in charge of your home, two hundred thousand naira for retreat, and that he spent the money? Useless woman.”

Related Characters: Big Daddy (Chief Adeoti) (speaker), Adunni, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti)
Page Number: 288
Explanation and Analysis:

I step inside, see about five girls sitting on the floor, their head down. They all look the same age of me: fourteen, fifteen. All are wearing dirty dress of ankara or plain material with shoes like wet toilet paper, tearing everywhere. Hair is rough, or low-cut to the scalp. They smell of stinking sweat, of a body that needs serious washing, and they all look sad, lost, afraid. Like me. […] One of the girls look up then, hook her eyes on me. There is no kindness in her eyes. Nothing. Only fear. Cold fear. She say nothing, but with her eyes, she seem to be saying: You are me. I am you. Our madams are different, but they are the same.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker)
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 291
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 47 Quotes

But there are words in my head, many things I want to say. I want to tell Ms. Tia I am sorry I made her come here. I want to ask why the doctor didn’t come too. Why didn’t he come and get a beating like his wife? If it takes two people to make a baby, why only one person, the woman, is suffering when the baby is not coming? Is it because she is the one with breast and the stomach for being pregnant? Or because of what? I want to ask, to scream, why are the women in Nigeria seem to be suffering for everything more than the men?

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Khadija, Kenneth Dada/The Doctor, Doctor Mama, The Birth-Makers
Related Symbols: Water
Page Number: 312
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 55 Quotes

I leave the room, closing the door on the memory of the sad and the bitter and the happy of it all, knowing that even if everybody forgets about Rebecca, or about me, the wall in the room we shared will remind them that we were here. That we are human. Of value. Important.

Related Characters: Adunni (speaker), Ms. Tia/Tia Dada, Big Madam (Florence Adeoti), Rebecca, Mama (Idowu)
Related Symbols: Houses
Page Number: 361
Explanation and Analysis: