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Set in a country where being gay is punishable by law, These Letters End in Tears is the heart-wrenching forbidden love story of a Christian girl with a deviant heart and a Muslim girl leading a double life Bessem notices Fatima for the first time on the soccer field—muscular and focused, she’s the only woman playing and seems completely at ease. When Fatima chases a rogue ball in her direction, Bessem freezes, mesmerized by the athlete’s charm and beauty. One playful wink from Fatima, and Bessem knows her life will never be the same. In Cameroon, a country where same-sex relationships are punishable by law, the odds are stacked against Bessem and Fatima from the start. And when Fatima’s older brother, a staunch Muslim, finds out about their affair, he intervenes by physically assaulting them, an incident that precedes a police raid at the only gay bar in town. After spending days in jail, Fatima goes missing without a trace, and Bessem is left with only rumors of her whereabouts. Has Fatima been sentenced to an unknown prison? Has she been banished from her community, or married off, as some have suggested? Or something even more sinister? Thirteen years later, Bessem is now a university professor leading a relatively quiet life, occasionally and secretly dating other women. However, she has never forgotten Fatima. After spotting a mutual friend for the first time in years—the last person who may have seen Fatima—Bessem embarks on a winding search for her lost love.
I love so much how the narrative mixes the past and present to develop the story of Bessem and Fatima, showing their story in such a beautiful way.
I didn't expect the book to be so poetical and yet so crude when explaining the punishments for being gay in Cameroon. However, I am already enraptured by the MC and her way of describing her relationship, can't wait to keep reading.
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I loved this book so, so much, and yet I'm overcome by a bittersweet feeling, a mix of sadness over the fate of Fatima, and excitement for the future of Bessem (thus the yellow heart emoji, my representation of their love being brutally stopped). Overall, a book I'll surely reread in the future.