Description
A brilliantly vivid and profoundly moving debut novel about a hot-tempered child, and the impact of Ethiopia’s revolution on her family.
Selam is the youngest child in her large, turbulent family. Even before she is born, her bewitching omniscience animates life in her Small Town in southwestern Ethiopia in the 1980s.
Selam and her father listen to the radio in secret as the socialist military junta that recently overthrew the government seizes properties and wages civil war in the North. Once an enterprising, landowning family, now they are ostracised under the new regime. In the Small Town where they live, nosy women convene around coffee ceremonies multiple times a day, the gossip spreading like wildfire.
As Selam’s mother, the powerful and relentlessly dignified Degitu, gets sicker, she embraces a persecuted, Pentecostal God, and insists her family convert alongside her. The family stands solidly in opposition to the times, and Selam grows up seeking revenge on despotic comrades, neighborhood bullies, and a ruthless God. Wise beyond her years yet thoroughly naive, she contends with an inner fury, a profound sadness, and a throbbing, unstoppable pursuit of education, freedom, and love.
Told through the perspective of its charming and irresistible narrator, The History of a Difficult Child is about what happens when mother, God, and country are at odds, and how one difficult child finds her voice.
About the Author
Mihret Sibhat was born and raised in a small town in western Ethiopia before moving to California when she was seventeen. A graduate of University of Minnesota’s MFA program, she was a 2019 Public Space Fellow and a 2019 Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Initiative grantee. In a previous life, she was a waitress, a nanny, an occasional shoe shiner, a propagandist, and a terrible gospel singer. She’s currently a miserable Arsenal fan.
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