• Gen. Yakubu Gowon Says Two Christian Friends in Plateau Betrayed Him in New Memoir

Former Nigerian Head of State, General Yakubu Gowon (Rtd.), has revealed that two of his Christian friends from Plateau State betrayed him, saying the experience remains one of the painful memories of his life.

Gowon made the revelation in his newly launched memoir, My Life of Duty, unveiled in Abuja during a ceremony attended by prominent national figures, including Vice President Kashim Shettima, Emir of Kano Muhammadu Sanusi II, former President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, former First Lady Aisha Buhari, former Heads of State, senior military officers, diplomats, and other distinguished guests.

In the book, the former Head of State recalled that two of his Christian friends in Plateau State abandoned and betrayed him, noting that the incident left a lasting emotional impact.

According to Gowon, despite the passage of time, he still feels the pain of what he described as their betrayal.

The elder statesman explained that one of the major reasons for writing My Life of Duty was to correct what he described as longstanding misconceptions and inaccurate interpretations about his life, his leadership, and the policies of his administration.

He said the memoir offers his personal account of key events in Nigeria
  • Trump said the United States was protecting allied Gulf countries and that these nations should reimburse the US for its security role
  • Trump said the United States was protecting allied Gulf countries and that these nations should reimburse the US for its security role
  • Firefighters worked to contain a blaze that spread into the Fontainebleau forest, prompting a full closure of the A6 motorway south of Paris.
  • Three Years After Lalong Left Office, Nigerians Reflect on His Legacy

Three years after the administration of former Plateau State Governor Simon Bako Lalong came to an end, residents and political observers have continued to reflect on his eight-year tenure, with discussions centering on his achievements, shortcomings, and overall legacy.

Across social media platforms and public forums, many Nigerians have been asking a common question: "Three years after the Lalong administration ended, what stands out most to you about his time in office?"

The question has generated diverse reactions, with some respondents highlighting infrastructure development, road construction, educational reforms, and efforts to promote peaceful coexistence during his administration.

Others, however, pointed to persistent security challenges, economic concerns, unemployment, and governance issues, arguing that these remain among the defining aspects of Lalong
  • Malaysia PM
  • Turkey Evaluates Participation in Canada
  • Nazari Da Bincike a Qarni na Ashirin da Daya 

Full video in the comment👇
  • About Morganable
    • Editorial Team
    • Ownership and Funding
  • Contact Us
  • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Standards | Morganable
    • Corrections Policy | Morganable
    • Terms of Use | Morganable
    • Advertising Policy | Morganable
    • Privacy Policy | Morganable
  • My Account
    • Sign Up
    • Log In
    • Reset Password
    • My Profile
  • Share Your Story
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
MORGANABLE
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
MORGANABLE
No Result
View All Result
Home Life & Culture Books

A Woman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review

by Solape Ige
December 18, 2024
in Books
0 0
2
A Woman is no Man By Etaf Rum - A Critical Review

A Woman is no Man By Etaf Rum - A Critical Review

Article Lens How to read this story
Desk Books
Story Mode Books & Ideas Report
Region Global
Public Interest Ideas, literature, knowledge and cultural memory

AWoman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review presents an intriguing critical review of the fictional literary novel by Etaf Rum. The novel presents the heartbreaking stories of three Palestinian women. It comes recommended.

 


It’s time you grew up and learned this now: A Woman Is No Man.

Book Description:

Book Title: A Woman Is No Man
Author: Etaf Rum
Published By: Harper
An imprint of Harpercollinspublishers
Year Of Publication: 2019
Genre: Fiction
⭐⭐⭐⭐/5

 “I was born without a voice, one cold, overcast day in Brooklyn, New York. No one ever spoke of my condition. I did not know I was mute until years later when I opened my mouth to ask for what I wanted and realized no one could hear me.

Where I come from, voicelessness is the condition of my gender, as normal as the bosoms on a woman’s chest, as necessary as the next generation growing inside her belly.

Where I come from, we’ve learned to conceal our condition. We’ve been taught to silence ourselves, that our silence will save us.

You’ve never heard this story before. No matter how many books you’ve read, how many tales you know, believe me: no one has ever told you a story like this one.

Where I come from, we keep these stories to ourselves. To tell them to the outside world is unheard of, dangerous, the ultimate shame.”

A Woman Is No Man

A Woman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review

This is a heartbreaking story of three generations of Palestinian-American women in one family, who have been oppressed by their culture – a culture that places no value whatsoever on women.

A culture that treats males as rightful beings and females as second-class citizens or necessary evils at worse, and breeding stock or domestic slaves at worst.

Primarily told in two time periods from three different perspectives, we mostly get to read Eighteen-year-old Deya’s point of view, and that of her mother, Isra.

We also occasionally get to see Fareeda’s point of view, Deya’s grandmother and Isra’s mother-in-law.

A Woman is No Man is set in two different locations. Palestine, where Isra was born and raised, and Brooklyn, where Isra moved to after her marriage to her Palestinian-American husband Adam, in the early 1990s.

At Seventeen,  Isra had received so many marriage proposals, which her father had turned down, waiting for this Palestinian American family to come for her.

Isra is expected to get pregnant and produce sons immediately.  After four daughters, she is regarded as a failure.

In Brooklyn, eighteen-year-old Deya is starting to meet with suitors.

Though she doesn’t want to get married yet, her grandparents give her no right of choice.

Deya dreams of college and loves to read.

But Fareeda is adamant that she get married.

After all, why should she waste her time reading and learning, when their culture has already predetermined that the only cards in her future are to be a wife and a mother?

History is repeating itself: Her mother would rather have gone to school instead of marrying Adam.

And what’s more, there’s a cloud of mystery in the story. Deya and her siblings have been raised by her father’s parents since she was eight, her parents having been supposedly killed in an auto accident, an event that has always been shrouded in mystery.

A Woman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review

Fareeda is the typical Mother-in-law from hell. As a fourteen-year-old, she married Khaleed a stranger while living in the al-Amari refugee camp and later moved to America with her husband.

Fareeda has a sense that the injustices towards women are wrong.

However, she accepts it as the way things are, the way things have always been.

Following the dogma of traditions that have also hurt her in the past, when she was at the receiving end of it.

A Review of Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani’s I Do Not Come To You By Chance

The Thing About A Sackful Of Wishes – A Review

About All The Ugly And Wonderful Things By Bryn Greenwood

https://www.morganable.com/a-review-of-chika-unigwes-night-dancer/

https://www.morganable.com/the-thing-about-the-smart-money-woman-a-review/

https://www.morganable.com/erotic-stories-for-punjabi-widows/

https://www.morganable.com/editorial-accidental-correction-of-our-national-abnormalities/

https://www.morganable.com/about-his-only-wife/

https://www.morganable.com/are-you-social-distancing-10-bookish-recommendations-to-ease-your-boredom/

https://www.morganable.com/over-the-bar-a-phrasal-depiction-of-edo-state-apc-family-feud/

https://www.morganable.com/a-critical-review-of-chika-unigwes-novel-night-dancer/

Etaf Rum referred to this story as the dark side of her Arab/Muslim culture. Yet, the events in this transcend culture.

Some variations of this story have and will continue to play out in some communities. The story goes through the lives of these unique women in a way that makes it relatable, whether you are Arabic or not. I felt connected to each character in so many different ways.

For all of his Ego, and Male chauvinistic or should I say misogynistic ways, I pitied Adam. Everything was set against him right from his birth. The culture placed so much pressure on him too. At the end of the day, patriarchy won. Not Adam. Not his mother Fareeda. And not Isra.

Etaf tackles so many heavy themes in A Woman Is No Man, such as Patriarchy, toxic and repressive cultures, domestic abuse, post-partum  depression.

A Woman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review

One notion that permeates the novel throughout is the concept of reading not only as a source of learning and entertainment but also as a source of comfort, company and hope. Isra would pass on her love of books to her daughter Deya, both of them sneaking out to read.

I finished reading A Woman is No Man, looked at my cartoons of books and realized how lucky I truly am, that no one tried to stop me from reading. I’m thankful that instead of stopping me from reading.

I had a grandmother who bought me storybooks out of the little she had, and a father who introduced me to the literary joys of the works of John Grisham, Jeffrey Archer, Wole Soyinka, and Chinua Achebe were/are.

This was such an emotionally draining story, but I think it is a story that needed to be told. If nothing at all, this book is a necessary addition to the conversation about how women are sometimes the greatest enforcers of patriarchy.

In this story, women were not only oppressed by men alone and regarded as less worthy and valueless by men alone but by women themselves, due to the relentless indoctrination of those around them.

It was as though, the women didn’t want other women to break through the circle of abuse and oppression.

I enjoyed A Woman is No Man. Infact, I savoured it. I read it slowly and reflected throughout. The writing is precise, beautiful and engaging. Engaging.

Growing up with my maternal grandmother as a child of divorced parents, I received mixed messages about the roles of women or rather what the place of a woman in society is, but mostly, my biggest takeaways were that I was to be educated at all costs, I needed to be fierce, strong, resourceful and most importantly, independent.

  I cannot for the life of me imagine what it would have been like to be taught the exact opposite of these values, to be taught that I was of no value, day in, day out, like a doctor’s prescription.


Have you read A Woman Is No Man? What did you think of it? Please share your thoughts with me.

A Woman Is No Man By Etaf Rum – A Critical Review

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
Morganable Briefing Stay with the story beyond the headline.

Get Morganable’s independent reporting, analysis and data-backed insight on Nigeria, Africa and the wider world.

Join the Briefing
Editorial Trust How Morganable protects public-interest journalism.

Our reporting is guided by accuracy, independence, fairness, transparency, correction discipline and public-interest relevance.

Editorial Standards Corrections Ownership & Funding
Morganable articles are produced for readers who want reporting with context, analysis with discipline and journalism that treats public consequence seriously.

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

Tags: A Woman Is No ManBooksEtaf RumWorld
Solape Ige

Solape Ige

Bibliophile . Intellectual Marlian. I Read, so I write.

Recommended

Leicester City FC Wins the English Community Shield

Leicester City FC Wins the English Community Shield

5 years ago
Funke Akindele Denies Snubbing Pasuma At Lagos Event

Funke Akindele Denies Snubbing Pasuma At Lagos Event

3 months ago

Popular News

  • Burna Boy Marks His 35th Birthday

    Burna Boy Marks His 35th Birthday

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Oyo Abduction:Senate Faults Makinde’s Call For UN Probe

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Toke Makinwa Sparks Gender War on Podcast

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • FG Inaugurates Advisory Committee To Review Economic Reforms

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Dangote Refinery Begins Petrol Sales In Dollars

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Follow me

Morganable News Logo

Morganable News Logo

Morganable News Logo

Morganable

Morganable Logo

Morganable

Independent Digital-First Newspaper

Morganable is an independent digital-first newspaper owned by Morganable Media Group, publishing journalism across news, business, entrepreneurship, spotlights, entertainment, sports, lifestyle and opinion for readers in Nigeria, Africa and the wider world.

Editorial Trust

  • Policy Hub
  • Editorial Standards
  • Publishing Principles
  • Ethics Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • Actionable Feedback Policy

Transparency & Commercial

  • Ownership and Funding
  • Diversity Policy
  • Advertising Policy
  • Sponsored Content Policy
  • Diversity Staffing Report

Legal & Reader Rights

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2019–2026 Morganable. Owned by Morganable Media Group. Independent digital-first newspaper. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Facebook
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Sign Up

© 2019–2026 Morganable. Owned by Morganable Media Group. Independent digital-first newspaper. All rights reserved.

Loading Comments...

    %d
      Verified by MonsterInsights