The Lost Sister, Andrea Gunraj
The Lost Sister, Andrea Gunraj
List: $31.95 | Sale: $22.36
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The Lost Sister

Author: Andrea Gunraj

Narrator: Phoenix Pagliacci

Unabridged: 10 hr 28 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 12/25/2020


Synopsis

The anticipated sophomore novel from the celebrated author of The Sudden Disappearance of Seetha, which Quill & Quire called ?an exciting, memorable debut.÷ Partially inspired by the real-life experiences of a former resident of the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children, The Lost Sister bravely explores the topics of child abuse, neglect, and abduction against a complex interplay of gender, race, and class dynamics.
Alisha and Diana are young sisters living at Jane and Finch, a Toronto suburb full of immigrants trying to build new lives in North America. Diana, the eldest, is the light of the little family, the one Alisha longs to emulate more than anyone else. But when Diana doesn?t come home one night and her body is discovered in the woods, Alisha becomes haunted. She thinks she knows who did it, but can?t tell anyone about it.
Unable to handle the loss of their daughter and unaware of Alisha?s secret guilt, the family unravels. It?s only through an unusual friendship with Paula, an older woman who volunteers at her school, that Alisha finds reprieve. Once an orphan in the Nova Scotia Home for Coloured Children and estranged from her own sister, Paula helps Alisha understand that the chance for redemption and peace only comes with facing difficult truths.

Reviews

Don't pick-up The Lost Sister if you are looking for a light fluffy read. This is an intense, honest and emotional reflection on losing a family member, racism, child abuse, and residential schools. For those not familiar, residential schools were situations in the past where the Canadian government......more

Goodreads review by Lyn

This is the best book I have read in a long time: serious, consistently engaging, and literate. Gunraj writes with an enviable turn of phrase, often giving me pause to savour a surprising figure of speech or description. The story is compelling, or rather, I should say both stories are compelling, f......more

Goodreads review by Julia

With compassion, clarity, and enormous talent, Andrea Gunraj tells an epic story of sisters from Guyana to Canada, from the Nova Scotia Home for Colored Children to the University of Toronto, and from 1938 to the present. This novel exposes losses no one should suffer but all too many bear. Reading......more