- Published: 21 January 2021
- ISBN: 9781529119091
- Imprint: Merky Books Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 384
We Are All Birds of Uganda
- Published: 21 January 2021
- ISBN: 9781529119091
- Imprint: Merky Books Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 384
A remarkably accomplished, polished debut.
Malorie Blackman
Zayyan's novel is emotive, multi-layered and makes for necessary reading.
Studio
The issues and subjects it takes on are big ... All are explored with great intelligence and sensitivity ... Zayyan's writing finds the lightness and fluency of a much more experienced novelist ... It is an epic novel in terms of historical, geographic, and cultural scope. It has much to recommend it: the tone, the structure, the ambition, and the clarity that enables the story to cover so much ground without ever becoming confused or lost during its 360-pages.
BBC News
[A] powerful debut exploring migration, identity and racial prejudice.
Mail on Sunday
On the evidence of this book, which is set in England and Uganda, [Zayyan] is an exciting new literary talent.
Phoenix Paper
Rightfully tipped for greatness.
Sunday Times
This moving tale of love and loss ... is well worth the wait.
Independent
If you've been looking for a novel that spins its plot around history, love, racism, ambition, faith, friendship and the sometimes crushing expectations of family, call off the search ... I've struggled with my attention span when it comes to reading during the third lockdown but this had me absolutely hooked ... incredibly skillful. I can't wait to see what she does next.
Gemma Crisp
[A] tender, beautifully written read ... This remarkably accomplished debut is a moving tale of love and loss, told between two continents over a troubled century.
Irish Country Magazine
From the moment the Afrori Team saw this book we were captivated. It is one of the most remarkable debut novels we have come across. A book you will not forget.
Afori Books
...It's a complex and delicately flavoured dish to be savoured and digested slowly.
The Northern Echo
Zayyan brings attention to a period of history that many may be unaware of and reckons with some of the real world consequences of colonialism in an interesting and personalised way. It is a brave book in those terms ... we also witness some very believable and relatable instances of modern day racism as well as a strong and interesting account of how he struggles to balance his way of life with the wishes of his parents ... Zayyan writes very well ... in Sameer she writes a complex, interesting character who makes sense as a product of his life circumstances ... We Are All Birds of Uganda does tell stories that I haven't often read before, and brings attention to parts of history that really need to be focused on in our current climate.
Bookmunch
Unflinchingly honest but tempered by its humanity, this is a novel for our times...
iPaper
It was stunning and took me on a journey that I didn't know I needed to take. A book that will stay with me for a long time.
Marie Claire
Impressive and admirable.
Shiny New Books
Beautiful.
Lonesome Reader
So brilliant, moving and just prescient for today that I just want to keep on waffling about it.
Crazed Red Head
A truly thought provoking novel which makes you wonder and question yourself and the world long after putting it down. A real success.
Candid Book Club
An extremely readable and fascinating dual narrative about the expulsion of East African Ugandans under Idi Amin in the 70s and the journey taken by Sameer, born in modern day Leicester, to understand his familial legacy.
Pandora Sykes
What's distinctive is the modern, multi-ethnic vision of masculinity she presents and the solidarity that emerges from it ... the romance that evolves between Sameer and Maryam reads like a miracle, something good that might yet be salvaged from trauma. But Zayyan won't allow such easy relief: the anxieties that have simmered throughout the novel finally surface at its end, taking a sinister shape in the shadowy last lines. It's a daringly indeterminate way to end, and undeniably powerful too.
Shahidha Bari, Guardian
[A] sprawling and epic dual narrative, spoke of her lived experience, but that which she'd seldom seen in the books she read: a story of cross-generational divides, and being both Black and South Asian ... It's woven together with gentle urgency; sensitive and with a rare perspective on how our mixed race backgrounds can help form feelings of both internal power and conflict.'
i-D Magazine
Rapper Stormzy's favourite debut soars by asking: Who are we - and how do we belong?
Shivani Kochhar, Mail Online
Sure to be a best-seller, this debut novel looks set to make big waves and is the perfect read for people looking to hear a familiar story told from an entirely new and fresh perspective.
Buzz Mag
A stirring exploration of love and displacement.
Woman & Home