



The Selfless Act of Breathing
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4.0 • 1 Rating
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- £2.99
Publisher Description
A heartbreaking, lyrical story for all of those who have fantasised about escaping their daily lives and starting over.
Michael Kabongo is a British-Congolese teacher living in London on the cusp of two identities. On paper, he seems to have it all - he's loved by his students, popular with his colleagues, and enjoys the pride of his mother who emigrated from the Congo. But behind closed doors, he's been struggling with the overwhelming sense that he can't improve the injustices he sees - from his efforts to change the lives of his students, to his attempts to transcend the violence that marginalises young Black men around the world.
Then Michael suffers a devastating loss, and his life is thrown into a tailspin. As he struggles to find a way forward, memories of his fathers' violent death, the weight of being a refugee, and an increasing sense of dread threaten everything he's worked so hard to achieve.
Longing to escape the shadows in his mind and start anew, Michael decides to spontaneously pack up and go to America, the mythical 'land of the free,' where he imagines everything will be better, easier - a place where he can become someone new, someone without a past filled with pain. On this transformative journey, Michael travels from New York City to San Francisco, partying with new friends, sparking fleeting romances, and splurging on big adventures.
In the back of his mind, Michael has a plan: follow his dreams until the money in his bank account runs out, and then he will decide if his life is truly worth living...
Written in spellbinding prose, with Bola's trademark, magnetic storytelling, The Selfless Act of Breathing is a heart-wrenching and deeply emotional novel about mental health, masculinity and the power of love. Perfect for fans of Rainbow Milk and the works of Derek Owusu.
What people are saying about The Selfless Act of Breathing:
'Well, wow. The writing in this book was so lyrical and beautiful... I really couldn't put this book down and finished it in two days... The last page had me on the verge of tears.' NetGalley Reviewer
'I knew from the opening that this book was going to break my heart. Breathless and gripping, it is a masterclass in empathy.' Yvonne Battle-Felton
'Heartfelt and searing... Devastating and insightful... Readers will be swept up in the sheer beauty of Bola's writing.' The i
'Possessed by a daring turn of phrase and at times a beautifully powerful sense of personal poignancy... Should be pushed into the hands of friends accompanied by the question: do you feel this too?' Big Issue
'Absolutely stunning.' Elizabeth Day
'I loved this book - I lost my whole day reading - just couldn't bear to put it down!' NetGalley Reviewer
'Wonderfully tender... Bola's vulnerable, delicate writing conveys so much truth and heart about the quiet pain in our hearts.' Nikesh Shukla
'Arresting... Important and emotive... Powerfully raw.' Guardian
'A bold work with a broad scope, bravely tackling masculinity, hopelessness and despair with force and directness.' Okechukwu Nzelu
'A beautiful, absorbing read. By turns searing and quietly devastating.' Irenosen Okojie
'An emotive, brave novel that ultimately holds out the prospect of salvation, without sacrificing any of its power.' Daily Mail
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bola's disappointing debut centers on a London high school teacher who makes a plan to travel to places he's never been and kill himself once his money runs out. Michael Kabongo grew up in London after fleeing the war-torn Congo with his parents. Lately he's been furious with his mother—with whom he lives—for starting a new relationship, despite her protests that his father, who was killed by police, has been dead for 20 years. He gives her an ultimatum: "If you marry him, then you will have no son, and I will have no mother." At his school, Michael engages apathetic student Duwayne in an effort to steer him away from selling drugs. Meanwhile, Michael's cordial relationship with colleague Sandra suffers as he deals with his depression, and he eventually quits his job. In a narrative that flits between past and present, Michael visits California, Chicago, and New York City, connecting with locals who lead him to his next destination, including a dancer/artist named Belle with whom he develops a romantic connection. The narrative has moving moments, including a fine ending, but too often the impact is blunted by Bola's heavy-handed prose. Indeed, he is at his best when he gets out of his own way and writes simply. There's promise here, but also more than a few rough edges.