To Marie's and Moïse's perspectives she adds those of Bruce, a terrifying gang leader Olivier, a police officer fighting a losing battle and Stéphane, the naïve aid worker whose efforts to help Moïse only make him more vulnerable. Nathacha Appanah has deftly assembled a small chorus of voices who narrate the heartbreak, violence, and injustice of life in Mayotte. In a state of panic, he runs away from home, and sets himself on a collision course with the gangs of Gaza, the largest and most infamous slum on the island. When Marie suddenly dies, thirteen-year-old Moïse is left completely alone, plunged into uncertainty and turmoil. She names him Moïse and raises him as her own-and she avoids his increasing questions about his origins as he grows up. Marie, a nurse in Mayotte, a far-flung, tropical department of France in the Indian Ocean, adopts a baby abandoned at birth by his mother, a refugee from Comoros. A potent novel about lost youth and migration by the author of The Last Brother and Waiting for Tomorrow
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