How Far Weve Come, Joyce Efia Harmer
How Far Weve Come, Joyce Efia Harmer
List: $23.99 | Sale: $16.79
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How Far We've Come

Author: Joyce Efia Harmer

Narrator: Joyce Efia Harmer

Abridged: 10 hr 47 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/25/2023


Synopsis

A groundbreaking and critically-acclaimed debut novel of friendship and freedom that crosses continents and centuries, in a timeslip story exploring the legacy of slavery, selected as The Times Children's Book of the Week.

Sometime, me love to dream that me is a human, a proper one, like them white folks is.

Enslaved on a plantation in Barbados, Obah dreams of freedom. As talk of rebellion bubbles up around her in the Big House, she imagines escape. Meeting a strange boy who’s not quite of this world, she decides to put her trust in him. But Jacob is from the twenty-first century. Desperate to give Obah a better life, he takes her back with him. At first it seems like dreams really do come true – until the cracks begin to show and Obah sees that freedom comes at an unimaginable cost . . .

Hopeful and devastating, this powerful novel about equality, how far we’ve come, and how far we still have to go, introduces an extraordinary new literary voice.

Praise for How Far We've Come:

‘A powerful exploration of racism, solidarity, friendship, freedom and hope’ Laura Bates

‘One of the most impressive young adult debuts of the year. This gripping novel takes a nuanced look at the legacy of slavery, injustice and inequality in today's world’ Observer 
 
‘Both hopeful and heartbreaking, this gripping book turns a searchlight on the changing faces of injustice through time’ Guardian
 
‘A brilliant idea and a powerful debut’ The Times, Children’s Book of the Week
 
‘A seriously impressive debut. Read it now’ Irish Times

‘A powerful, ambitious, unforgettable read about freedom, rebellion, love and hope’ Liz Hyder
 
‘A gut punch of a debut, this book is both vital reading and a call to arms’ Laura Wood

‘Compassionate, brave, authentic, educational. Everyone should read it’ Abiola Bello

About Joyce Efia Harmer

Joyce Efia Harmer was born in London to Ghanaian parents. She has a BA in English Language and Literature at King’s College, London and went on to teach English. In 2016, Joyce was selected as one of six writers to take part in the Megaphone writer’s scheme to support diverse voices in Children’s Literature. In 2017, she was selected as a finalist in Penguin’s WriteNow scheme. She lives in London with her husband and two sons. How Far We've Come is her debut novel.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Vanessa

How Far We've Come has a powerful plot, simultaneously set in the disparate worlds of 1834 Barbados, narrated by a black female protagonist (Obah), and 21st Century England, through the eyes of a white teenage boy (Jacob). It uses the same timeslip device as Octavia Butler does in Kindred, but in a......more

Goodreads review by Jen

How Far We've Come is a compelling YA novel exploring the legacy of slavery. Comparisons to Kindred were always going to be inevitable with a time-travel concept like this, and I was intrigued to see how Harmer approached it from a YA perspective. I found Obah's voice instantly engaging, and the worl......more

Goodreads review by Payal

It's so hard to rate a book like this one that talks of the unspeakable things that humans did. I have complicated feelings about the book: on the one hand, I thought this could be the science-fiction novel Kindred (Octavia Butler) wasn't, but in the end it didn’t exactly deliver. On the other hand,......more

Goodreads review by Rachel

For more YA reviews, visit my blog – Unsupervised in a Bookstore. Obah is a slave on a Barbados plantation in 1834. Jacob is a descendant of a slave-owning family, determined to atone for the crimes of his ancestors. When Jacob finds a way to time travel to Obah's plantation, he seizes his chance......more

Goodreads review by Becca

*Actual Rating: 3.5 stars* Obah can only dream of freedom, of a life that is her own. Enslaved on a Barbados plantation—a large property or piece of land dependent on the labor of enslaved people—she knows nothing of privilege and peace. Only, when there are talks of a rebellion in what they call the......more