Cursed Daughters
The RIVETING bestselling heartbreaker, from the author of My Sister, the Serial Killer
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- USD 11.99
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- USD 11.99
Descripción editorial
SHORTLISTED FOR THE NERO AWARD 2026
Readers are falling hard for Cursed Daughters...
'ABSOLUTELY RIVETING!!'
'Will hook you from start to finish... I read in two days!'
'Oh my gosh this book is so good!''
'I cannot express how much I adored this book - like truly, madly, deeply adored it'
Your daughters are cursed. They will pursue men, but the men will be like water in their palms. Your granddaughters will love in vain. Your daughters, your daughter's daughters, and all the women to come will suffer for man's sake...
Eniiyi has heard about the family curse her whole life. She's never believed in it. She's also heard, her whole life, that she is the reincarnation of her dead aunt, Monife. Same eyes, same left hand, same scar in the same place. She's never believed in that, either.
Then she falls in love with a handsome local boy, and Monife begins to appear to Eniiyi: in her dreams, on the beach, in the mirror, pulling her, it seems, towards the same terrible fate. Can Eniiyi live her life on her own terms, or is history - and the curse - repeating itself?
'Funny and fearless, soaked in secrets, spirit, heartbreak, and love... Impossible to put down' Abi Daré
'A rich and absorbing tale of destiny versus self-determinism... I lost myself within its gorgeous pages' Jennie Godfrey
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this scintillating saga from Braithwaite (My Sister, the Serial Killer), generations of women in a Lagos family contend with a curse that prevents them from securing husbands. The nonlinear narrative begins in 2000 when 25-year-old Monife Falodun drowns herself after losing the love of her life, Kalu. Braithwaite then rewinds to unspool Monife and Kalu's passionate and ill-fated love story, eventually revealing how they were separated. Along the way, she interweaves Monife's story with that of Monife's niece Eniiyi, born on the day of Monife's funeral. Eniiyi looks so much like Monife that their family believes Eniiyi is Monife reincarnated. Indeed, the girl shares certain characteristics with her aunt, such as a desire for love and the hope to break their family's curse, which was placed on their ancestor Feranmi by the first wife of Feranmi's husband, who said, "No man will call your house, home." Eniiyi has recurring dreams of Monife by the sea where she drowned, but Monife never speaks in the dreams until after Eniiyi, now a recent college graduate, rescues a handsome boy named Zubby from drowning. Afterward, Monife turns to Eniiyi in a dream and mysteriously says, "Not again." As Eniiyi falls for Zubby, she discovers a connection between him and Monife's past. Braithwaite's use of magical realism is effortless and vivid, as when the dream version of Monife speaks to Eniiyi in Eniiyi's own voice. She also sustains the strange mystery of whether Eniiyi is in fact Monife, all while exploring the family's painful cycle of abandonment. This is riveting.