Everything that is being said about this book is true: it’s
heartbreaking and uplifting at the same time. It’s haunting yet leaves
you loving the character of Little Bee. It’s a story of two
women—Nigerian born Little Bee, and Londoner Sarah--who meet totally by
coincidence, and whose lives circle back to each other several years
later with profound consequences.
Little Bee is a totally engaging character—her strength and
determination, her struggle to stay alive, to tell the truth, to create
a life with meaning, to confront what life has dealt her—all these
things made me care deeply about her and to worry about her at every
turn. Through this 16-year-old orphan we learn the realities of
immigration detention centers, deportation, and asylum seeking. At the
same time, we learn about human compassion and the ways in which family
(or strangers bound by mutual experience) save us from our deepest
fears.
I’m recommending Little Bee because it is storytelling at
its best. There are shockingly sad moments; I feel I must put that
caution out there. But this is by no means reason to avoid the book.
Within these pages is a story that makes us each more compassionate and
informed about the world experience. To miss out on knowing Little Bee
would be a big mistake. ~Wendee