Cold Coffee in Asmara
by Andrew Goss
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Pub Date 28 Mar 2024 | Archive Date 25 Apr 2024
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Description
A contemporary literary novel following an aid worker in Eritrea, north-east Africa, in the aftermath of its protracted war with Ethiopia.
John hopes to lay to rest the ghosts of a previous mission in Pakistan, but also learns of other personal losses endured by his colleagues.
The second in the author’s trilogy focusing on communities less fortunate across the developing world.
A powerful refugee backstory of those joining the desperate and dangerous migrant trail from Africa to Europe.
When traumatised aid worker John Cousins arrives in north-east Africa he hopes to find a sense of personal peace among a gentle people rebuilding their lives following a bitter and prolonged war. In Eritrea he begins to forget his own emotional pain and lay to rest the ghosts of his previous mission in Pakistan. Will the work with fellow aid worker and nurse Hannah Johnson help heal the scars? And what is the secret of her own past?
Cold Coffee in Asmara is a story of personal loss, redemption and love set against a backdrop of humanitarian work in a remote corner of the world where African, Arab and European influences collide.
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781835740651 |
PRICE | £3.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 304 |
Links
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
This is a really beautiful story set in a backdrop of an area/conflict that I haven't read much about in the past. I enjoyed this and will recommend to others!
Thank you, NetGalley, and the publisher for access to this e-ARC.
Genuinely one of the best books I have read this year. It's powerful and brilliant, raw and angry, poignant and starkly beautiful. The author's realism and compassion irradiates his writing.
The plight of the people of Eritrea and the dedication of the aid workers who battle against the odds to help them is profoundly moving but when two native male nurses become migrants attempting the perilous journey to the west it lends the narrative a tidal flow that is impossible to resist.
This is a compelling and complex exposé. A book that demands we start paying attention to the migrants arriving on our shores. It's compassionate and engrossing.