Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Grace

Rate this book
FROM THE WINNER OF THE NIGERIA PRIZE FOR LITERATURE

It is Baby’s birthday, but Grace has not seen her first born in twenty-six years. Now a wife, mother to twin daughters and the owner of a successful medical clinic, Grace has carefully constructed a new life. And now, the secret she’s kept for decades is about to resurface – and it could destroy everything.

Grace was only fifteen when she got pregnant and, under pressure from her parents, gave Baby away. Unable to forgive their decision, she cut them off completely. Now, when Grace’s estranged mother walks back into her life unannounced, the fragile existence she spent years building begins to unravel.

Grace is a story about motherhood, finding meaning for yourself and fighting for the people that you love.

256 pages, Kindle Edition

Published January 15, 2026

23 people are currently reading
1040 people want to read

About the author

Chika Unigwe

35 books263 followers
Chika Unigwe was born in Enugu, Nigeria, and now lives in Turnhout, Belgium, with her husband and four children. She writes in English and Dutch.

In April 2014 she was selected for the Hay Festival's Africa39 list of 39 Sub-Saharan African writers aged under 40 with potential and talent to define future trends in African literature.
.
Unigwe holds a BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, and an MA from the Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium. She also holds a PhD from the University of Leiden, The Netherlands, having completed a thesis entitled "In the shadow of Ala. Igbo women writing as an act of righting" in 2004.


Chika Unigwe is een dichter en schrijfster, geboren in Nigeria en wonende in België (zij beschrijft zichzelf als "Afro Belgische"). Ze schrijft in het Nederlands en in het Engels. Ze is doctor in de literatuurwetenschap aan de Universiteit Leiden (Nederland).

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
16 (14%)
4 stars
53 (47%)
3 stars
37 (33%)
2 stars
5 (4%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews
Profile Image for Michelle.
1,587 reviews285 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 19, 2025
My first book by this author and I'm now eyeing up her back list.

Set in Nigeria we meet our protagonist Grace as she sits eating a birthday cake, as she has done every year on Baby's birthday.

Grace hasn't seen Baby since she left her on a dark street the evening after she was born.

This is tackling some big issues not only in Nigerian society, but for women globally. I appreciated the insight into Nigerian culture and also into 'baby factories'.

Considering the heavy themes here, this book feels extraordinary light and short. While I enjoyed it, I would have preferred another 100 pages fleshing the characters out and adding some depth however as a novella it works.

From the reviews, I see the author is known for a heavy writing style, so I'll definitely check her other titles out.

Four stars.
Profile Image for BookOfCinz.
1,639 reviews3,891 followers
November 27, 2025
One to watch for 2026! A brilliant read!

When Grace was a teenager she got pregnant and her very strict parents made her give the Baby up, she's never recovered from it and every year since she celebrates Baby's birthday. She decides to move on from this, which meant leaving her family behind and starting fresh. Fast forward to today and Grace is doing well for herself. She's the owner of a very successful clinic that help women in many circumstances, she is a wife and mother to twin girls. Graces comes home one day and the mother she told her husband is was dead is sitting in her living room, this is the first of many things that led to the unraveling of her life.

Chika Unigwe did a brilliant job with this book. I felt so many emotions reading this, and the ending was shocking! Overall an amazing read.
Profile Image for Violet.
1,033 reviews61 followers
March 23, 2026
I really enjoyed Grace. I read it very quickly and stayed up late to finish it - we follow Grace, a Nigerian woman in Enugu, Nigeria, both in 1993 as she is about to give birth to a baby at age 15, a baby she knows she won't be keeping, and in 2020 as her estranged mother reappears in her life and asks her to meet and forgive the family of the baby's father, who wanted nothing to do with her and treated her like a criminal for becoming pregnant.
It was really interested to read about attitudes towards women, pregnancy, teenage pregnancy, fertility and the treatment of women versus men; Chika Unigwe gave us a good character with Grace, who has become a midwife and provides "untraceable babies" to wealthy couples (which sustains her expensive lifestyle); I enjoyed that Grace was morally grey. The ending of the book was a bit of a disappointment, with a plot twist that felt unconvincing and a bit far-fetched, and a quick resolution where (no spoiler, I promise) all ends well and everyone is happy.
It was well-written and well-paced though and I enjoyed it.

Free ARC sent by Netgalley.
Profile Image for Stephanie Davy.
188 reviews13 followers
January 16, 2026
4.25
This book broke my heart slowly, while exploring what it is to be a woman and a mother in Nigeria.

I really liked the character work in this, and how it showed the ways in which people deal with pain and grief, and how it shapes our futures. It also impresses the importance of sex education for young people. And most importantly, perhaps, is that it shows with startling clarity, the pain and difficulty of growth and healing.

I never really decided if I liked Grace and honestly, it wasn’t even important. I really enjoyed getting to understand her mind and how she developed throughout the story. I was vaguely aware that in other circumstances, I’m sure I would feel strongly about her profession, but getting to really understand her and what she was trying to do made it make some sense. And a decision she made later on showed that she wasn’t a bad person.

For a short read, I felt like I went through a lot. I found the style unusual, engaging, and moving. I could feel the weight of the past bearing down on every decision made in the present.

There were a couple of twists towards the end that were really not for me and I wished I could know what happened to a certain side character instead, who had posed something of a dilemma for Grace. But nonetheless, this was a touching, thought-provoking read, and I think it would be a superb book club pick.
Profile Image for Torri Chayanne .
6 reviews
February 11, 2026
This book gives ‘Nollywood Novela’ vibes. It was meh, predictable and easily resolved with very little resistance or impactful storyline. The story itself was ok, but the writing style felt too busy, crammed with repetitive details in some parts and disorganized without a clear voice in others; I knew everything i needed to know within the first 100 pages and the rest was boring.

I had a hard time visualizing this book and getting any depth about the characters. I would’ve liked to have read this story from different characters’ perspectives rather than a time skip style chapter format, which wasn’t used much.. I understood and felt Grace’s trauma, her heartbreak and weight of the societal role that she fell into as a result. I found Grace’s years long, unnoticed and consistent unraveling combined with debating keeping her secrets AND self righteous illegal human trafficking operation as a career path way left of center and not the shock value/impactful conundrum you might think it is.

And If I can’t stand one thing, it’s a quick resolution! What do you mean your husband left you for 6 months and he came back all because you asked? And the oh-so inconvenient mix up with the DNA results just felt like a last second cliff hanger.

Meh.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Amaka Azie.
Author 29 books248 followers
March 26, 2026
I absolutely loved Grace. It kept me hooked from start to finish. I couldn’t put it down!

The story follows Grace, a successful midwife 👩🏽‍⚕️ with a loving husband and twin daughters. On the surface, she’s living a happy, fulfilled life… but something is missing. A visit from her estranged mother brings that emptiness to light and unearths a secret she thought she had buried long ago 😮‍💨💔.

This book dives into themes of teenage pregnancy, family dynamics, illegal adoption, betrayal, and forgiveness, all handled so beautifully and thoughtfully.

I loved that Grace was flawed but self-aware enough for me to root for her. Watching her grow and shift her perspective, especially about her job, was incredibly satisfying 🙌🏽. And let’s be real, I love a boss bitch in fiction, and Grace was definitely that. A woman who doesn’t need a man or male validation is already a win for me.

My favourite part? The ending. Honestly, I was bracing myself for tragedy (based on the author’s previous works 😅), but that wasn’t the case at all! I literally sighed with relief and joy at the end 😌💖.

A highly recommended 5-star read from me ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

I read it on @Masobe ebook platform, and I’m taking it as a good omen that my first book there was a 5-star read, and my first 5-star of the month too! 🎉💫
Profile Image for nyakhakhu_.
61 reviews2 followers
April 25, 2026
4.25

Okika is a foolish husband but grace is foolisher.

This would make a great nollywood film.
Profile Image for Thacutepixel❤️..
25 reviews
March 31, 2026
Grace is honestly a good book, but I won’t lie, the storytelling felt unnecessarily stretched at times. There were too many details that didn’t add real value to the plot. For example, why are we being told about Grace’s father’s friend who ate the four eggs her mother saved for breakfast? Or Okika’s uncle looting plates and furniture? Those moments just felt like fillers rather than meaningful additions.

At some point, the plot even started feeling like a typical Nollywood script. The reunion between Grace and her daughter felt too convenient and unrealistic. Seeing a random news post and contacting an email like newshavenbaby@gmail and somehow everything just falls into place? It didn’t feel convincing. And how exactly did the daughter even think to use “baby” in the email? That part needed more depth.

Ifesi’s mother also really annoyed me, even though her role wasn’t major. What kind of mother advises her daughter to accept a cheating husband just as long as he comes home? Saying things like “just satisfy him so you don’t suffer” was honestly ridiculous and disappointing. Yes I know he didn’t cheated but the way ifesi mother put it was off. She literally said to her daughter that her man can go out to have babies as long as he comes back home to her she’s safe, ugh??

Now, about Grace herself, I don’t think she had the full right to blame her parents for everything. Yes, her situation was painful, but she made a mistake, and her mother actually tried to support her by helping her hide the pregnancy. Could her mother have done more by letting her keep the baby? Yes. But Grace still needed to take accountability. She let Ben manipulate her, and that wasn’t her parents’ doing.

Speaking of her mother again, I didn’t understand why she resurfaced just to ask for forgiveness on behalf of Ben. That felt very misplaced. If she wanted to reconnect with her daughter, it should have been for their relationship, not because of a man who caused so much damage.

Okika too had no right to act self-righteous. He fathered a child outside wedlock as well, so his “betrayal” angle didn’t move me at all. And let’s not forget how he took the children away from Grace, he wasn’t a good man.

On a lighter note, I really loved Oniyeye’s free-spirited personality. She brought a refreshing energy to the story. However, I do wish Grace had eventually told Ben’s parents about their grandchild, it felt like something important was left unresolved.

And honestly, I’m still annoyed that Ben didn’t really suffer for what he did. The way he manipulated Grace was terrible, and his death just felt like an easy escape instead of real consequences.

Overall:
A good and engaging story, but weighed down by unnecessary details and some unrealistic plot developments. Still worth reading, but expect a bit of frustration along the way.
Profile Image for Testimony .
34 reviews
April 21, 2026
What happened to her could have been avoided but she was naive. As the story progressed, I found myself shifting some of that blame to her parents… but then again, it's the typical reaction in many African households.

Her anger and guilt were very valid, and I could understand how those emotions shaped her choices and led her down the path she took. It reinforced how much our past experiences influence the way we see the world.

That said, the story didn’t offer much surprise for me. It felt quite predictable, and I struggled to stay fully engaged, I found myself just wanting to get to the end.

The book explores themes of self-discovery, family, and forgiveness, but overall, it was an okay read for me.
Profile Image for Bukola Akinyemi.
323 reviews31 followers
April 3, 2026
I am a big fan of Chika Unigwe’s writing, so I was excited to read Grace.

She has a remarkable way of shining a light on important societal issues, particularly those affecting women. In Grace, she explores themes such as fertility struggles, unwanted pregnancies, and the stigma surrounding adoption in Nigeria.

This book made me feel upset, hopeful, and frustrated almost in equal measure.

It does not offer easy answers but it invites you to sit with discomfort and reflect on the realities many women face but are rarely spoken about openly.

Overall, this is a compelling and important read that I would recommend to anyone interested in character driven stories that tackle real world issues.
Profile Image for Frances.
165 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2026
This book healed me, it reminded me that beauty can come out of chaos. The ending gave me a smile that filled my stomach like food
Profile Image for Uche Ezeudu.
182 reviews12 followers
January 18, 2026
4.5 ⭐️

Grace by Chika Unigwe is an eponymous novel that centers on the life of its protagonist, Grace. One of the first things that struck me was the setting in Enugu, Nigeria. For those conversant with Unigwe’s body of work, this familiar backdrop feels like a homecoming, as she frequently weaves the city into her narratives.

The story opens in 2020, amidst the mid-COVID landscape. On the surface, Grace has it all: a perfect family and a successful career as a midwife. However, beneath this calm exterior, she is in deep turmoil. We find her eating a celebratory cake every year to mark the birthday of her first child, a child she calls “Baby,” whom she had to give up twenty six years ago. This ritual feels celebratory on the surface but is steeped in grief. As a reader, you’re left wondering how she manages to maintain such composure.

Through seamless flashbacks, the author takes us back to 1993. We see fifteen-year-old Grace navigating the complexities of young love, teenage curiosity, and peer pressure, which eventually lead to a teenage pregnancy. Unigwe brilliantly uses the dynamic between Grace and her boyfriend, Ben, to highlight the dangers of inadequate sex education. This negligence is rooted at home; when a curious Grace once asked her mother how babies were made, the response was dismissive. Ultimately, Grace’s experience was one of sexual assault and coercion, though she was cajoled into believing it was intimacy.

The crux of the story lies in the heartbreaking moment Grace’s parents forced her to give up her child. As a reader, this raised so many questions: Why were they unwilling to take responsibility for the child, especially since Grace was an only child? It makes Grace’s later decision to cut them off entirely and tell her own family she is an orphan feel entirely understandable, even though she quietly continues to provide for their welfare.

As a midwife, Grace runs a controversial "side business" providing new homes for children born to desperate mothers. While Unigwe touched on this "baby business" in her previous book, The Middle Daughter, she provides far more introspection here. It creates a fascinating moral conflict: Is Grace doing a "good" thing by placing these babies in wealthy homes where they will be spared the harsh realities of poverty? Or is she causing irreparable harm by stripping them of their origins?

Unigwe also tackles the stigma of adoption with jarring accuracy. One line from Part One (Chapter 9) stood out to me:
“She remembered one of her mother’s friends mocking the couple: ‘Imagine throwing a party for a child they bought.’”
It is moments like this that show how deeply ingrained and harmful societal attitudes can be, and why books like this are so necessary. This book challenges the tenacious, often harmful beliefs society clings to regarding "blood" versus "bought" children.

Furthermore, the novel explores the heavy burden society places on women to provide children. We rarely hear the term “barren man,” yet "barren woman" is a common, stinging label. Unigwe asks why the responsibility of procreation is ascribed almost exclusively to women.

Unigwe also raises thoughtful questions about marriage and disclosure. How much of one’s past should be shared, and at what cost? In a world that judges women more harshly than men, these are not easy questions to answer. It plays into the secrets Grace keeps from her husband.

Grace is a thought-provoking tale of motherhood, young love, family, loss, secrets, and survival. Every Unigwe book I read resonates deeply with me because she roots her stories so firmly in human nature, culture, and tradition. I strongly recommend this book to anyone looking to examine their own consciousness and do away with the stigmas that unjustly alienate people.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
10 reviews
March 20, 2026
this is not my first or even second unigwe read so i had very very high hopes. like i heard that this book was coming out & i was sattt. but sighhh, this was not a good book. i did not enjoy this at all. it was very hard to finish, but i had started & dumped another book i had semi-high hopes for before this one that was also had to finish so i told myself i had to see this through.

now do i think the story itself is bad? no. the synopsis is captivating & the way the synopsis is written, it pulls you in. the execution of the story however, very flat. i didn’t buy into this story, grace’s unending grief & her actions which were mostly inactions. immediately, the story starts with her eating cake & we learn that she eats cake every year on the birthday of the daughter she was forced to abandon. you’re unable to forget that she’s grieving (i would say ‘supposedly grieving’) baby. the book tries to arrest your attention by not giving away what happened to baby. was the abortion successful? a miscarriage? did baby die when she was abandoned on the street? even tho i was having an awful time reading this, i felt i was owed this resolution, so i soldiered on. but ugh, the plot did not move at all.

it wasn’t until 80% into this book that finally we see grace do something (more like, react to what was done) about her supposed grief. first, she’s so traumatised by being forced by her parents to abandon her newborn on the road so she goes into midwifery & then starts a clinic where she helps other people give up their children, some of these consensual, others also forced by their parents? idg the thought process. this is why i don’t buy her grief. & then she’s faced with a work situation where she meets a woman she is literally forcing her daughter to give up a child & claims she feels triggered by the similarity, but initially accepts the money? this should have been the inciting incident. but she does nothing.

let’s say she truly wanted to keep the past in the past, keep her family together, so she couldn’t take the (public) actions she needed to find out what happened to baby. but then she’s sooo overwhelmed by this grief that even when her mother’s resurrection upends her life, she still does nothing? it’s baby’s decision to takeout the ad in the paper that leads to them finally meeting? like she was so passive. it was annoying. just crying & eating cake & then starving & making money off the same (ILLEGAL) situation that traumatised you & trying to justify it. then the mixed up dna results that was supposed to be like idk, a shocking twist, that was quickly untwisted. so unnecessary. i was already bored, i was unmoved.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
1,196 reviews51 followers
November 6, 2025
Thanks to Canongate for sending me a proof copy of this book in return for an honest review.

I'm not sure this would have been a book I'd choose off the shelf myself because it sounded quite intense, but I would have seriously missed out.

It's not an easy book to read, subject wise. There are some difficult topics spoken about but Chika has handled them very well. They're not over the top or exhibitionist, they're honest and sympathetic without avoiding the difficulties they bring.

I loved Grace as a main character. She's been through some things - not all of which is her fault - and she's grown and made something of her personal and professional life. But she had my heart and my compassion right from the off and I really enjoyed following her story.

If you've ever wondered what people mean when they say something was an emotional gut punch, then read this book. It's not trying to be overly heart-breaking, but the beauty of her writing and the subject matter is wonderfully sad.

The gender imbalance touched on in this boo - the way boys and men can seemingly get away with anything unscathed, but it's the women who are left to deal with the consequences. It's very black and white in this book, and whilst it may not be quite as clear-cut in reality, I think it's more relatable than we might want to admit.

It's also interesting from a cultural perspective. I don't know much about Nigerian culture and it was fascinating to see the difference in how topics like teenage pregnancy and adoption can be viewed in somewhere like Nigeria compared to here in England.

Parts of it angered me too. There are moments where there is a complete lack of understanding and patience and love, that I was finding myself shaking the book, wanting to shake some sense into the characters at times.

It's light on dialogue and heavy on narrative, which I prefer. It gives us a deeper insight into Grace herself and the circumstances she has found herself in. I felt closer to her as a character this way than I thin I would have if it had just been her talking a lot.

It isn't a particularly long book, but given the quite serious topics I thought it would take me a while to get through, I thought it would be heavy. But I zoomed through it, it's so well written and so addictive. I HIGHLY recommend it.
Profile Image for Letlhogonolo Mokgoroane.
15 reviews
April 18, 2026
Reading Chika Unigwe’s Grace took me straight to that unforgettable scene in Matilda where Bruce Bogtrotter is forced to eat an entire chocolate cake in front of everyone. Not because cake is meant to be punishment, but because that moment captures something precise: the crowd watching, the pressure in the room, the way sweetness turns heavy when it is tied to shame, control, and survival.

That is what Grace feels like, in the best and most unsettling way. It is beautifully made, richly layered, and not the kind of story you breeze through. You start with the surface: the polish of Unigwe’s prose, the careful release of information, the atmosphere of Enugu that feels so vivid it might as well be a character. Everything looks inviting, even elegant, but the longer you sit with it, the more you realise this is not cake for celebration.

Grace, as a character, has that same forced composure as Bruce with a fork in hand, expected to perform normality under an impossible weight. She is a midwife, outwardly competent and professional, but carrying a past that keeps pressing up through the present. Her resilience is not packaged as inspiration; it is rendered as endurance, the kind that shows up to work and keeps going even when every bite pulls something up you would rather keep buried.

And then there is the mother-daughter relationships, which are is prickly, complicated, intimate in a way that can bruise, and written with a realism that refuses easy villains or neat redemption arcs.

What makes the book truly land is its social critique: the “baby factory” crisis, the stigma around unwed mothers, the hypocrisy dressed up as morality, and the way consequences fall hardest on women. It is heavy subject matter, grief, reproductive trauma, coercion, handled with care and clarity.

As for the ending, I honestly do not know how I feel about it yet. In Matilda, Bruce finishes the cake and the room has to sit with what it demanded. Grace leaves something hanging, and I found myself turning it over instead of closing the book and moving on. Maybe that ambiguity is the point, and perhaps that is the mark of a good book.
Profile Image for Tofunmi A.
11 reviews1 follower
February 21, 2026
Grace is the perfect title for this book, let me start from there.

The story centres on Grace, a woman who, at fifteen, became pregnant and gave up her baby under pressure from her family. The child she never got to name is known only as Baby. Decades later, Grace has built a carefully constructed life: she's a wife, mother to twin daughters, and runs a successful medical clinic. But that secret has been buried for 26 years. When her estranged mother suddenly reappears, everything Grace has built begins to shift and she's forced to reckon with the choices she made, her relationships, and what motherhood truly means to her.

What makes this book remarkable is the way Unigwe handles Grace as a character. At first you empathise with her, then the purpose of her 'clinic' makes you angry, and then slowly, you start to understand her. You give her...grace! It's rare to read a character who makes genuinely questionable choices and still find yourself siding with them. I wasn't mad at her in the way you're mad at a villain. I disagreed with her yet understood her and somehow that complexity made it worse. The book is a devastating study of what happens when you let unprocessed trauma dictate your decisions, convincing yourself you're doing good (and some might argue that she was), when perhaps you're not.

Unigwe is also deeply honest about the act of "coming clean" and how telling the truth isn't always the most loving thing you can do. Sometimes the people you love need to be spared from it.

This book sat with me long after the last page. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Nana.
24 reviews
December 16, 2025
This was one of my most anticipated reads of 2026, so imagine my excitement when I was approved to read an ARC on NetGalley.

This is my first read by this author, and it did not disappoint.

The book opens with Grace, a woman in her early forties, devouring a cake. We soon learn it’s a ritual she’s kept up for the past 26 years in remembrance of the birthdate of a baby she gave away at the age of 15. Now a successful businesswoman and midwife running a clinic that provides babies to childless couples, and in a steady marriage that has yielded twin girls, Grace, on the outside, is the epitome of a woman who has it all. But does she?

Grace comes home one day to find the mother she told her husband was dead very much alive, sitting in her living room. Moving back and forth in time, we learn why Grace has lied to her husband for so many years, and whether she and her family will be able to survive this revelation.

I really liked this book, as the themes it explores—motherhood, forgiveness, agency, and identity—are ones I love reading about. The writing style was simple but evocative. Although I did not agree with Graces line of work for ethical reasons, the writer is still able to garner empathy from the reader giving food for thought as to why some women make the decisions they do. However, i felt the tension could have been ramped up slightly to give the book that gripping feeling that keeps the reader on the edge of her seat. It also dragged a little in the middle, and the ending felt slightly rushed. Still, it’s definitely one I’d recommend.

And a big thank you to the publisher @canongate for the ARC via NetGalley.
Profile Image for Rochelle.
60 reviews3 followers
March 22, 2026
This was an intresting read that explored teenage pregnancy within a Nigerian context, while also shedding light on broader societal expectations and judgments placed on women.

One of the aspects I appreciated most was how the novel didn’t limit itself to Grace’s story alone. It added depth by contrasting her experience with the pressures faced by couples expected to have children immediately after marriage and the stigma directed at women who struggle with infertility. This dual perspective made the narrative feel more layered and realistic.

The exploration of the “baby market” in Nigeria was particularly striking. The way the story connects unwanted pregnancies and childless marriages to the illegal trade of babies brings everything full circle, highlighting a complex and often hidden issue.

Grace herself is a memorable character—I found myself laughing at her moments of wit while also feeling frustrated by her stubborn decisions. That mix made her feel very real.

While parts of the plot were slightly predictable, the novel still succeeds in shining a light on topics that aren’t often discussed openly. Overall, an engaging read.
Profile Image for Farah G.
2,282 reviews47 followers
October 13, 2025
When 15 year old Grace, raised in a loving but conservative Nigerian family, gets pregnant, there is no question of her keeping the baby after the father's family denies all responsibility for the situation. But Grace is never able to forgive her parents for making her give up Baby.

Although she eventually has a good marriage, becomes the mother of twin girls, and runs a thriving maternity clinic, she is never able to forget the trauma of giving up Baby.

And now, over a quarter of a century later, Grace faces a reckoning when her mother unexpectedly shows up and her outraged husband demands to know why Grace has told him all these years that her parents were dead...

This is a fantastic novel. It addresses issues of family relationships, romance and marriage, parents and the failures of their parenting, adoption, cultural expectations, class issues, and so much more. It gets 4.5 stars and I wish I could read it all over again!

I received a free copy of this book from Netgalley in exchange for an honest review
Profile Image for Treasure.
464 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 9, 2026
Initial thought : it’s an ok read.
Don’t expect the same from this book as the middle daughter .

Book overview
We follow Grace’s story, at 15 year old she finds herself pregnant.
Keeping the baby is not an option after the father's family denies all responsibility for the unborn child .
To save the family from disgrace , Grace’s parent ask her to abandon the child after birth.
26 year later Grace is a wife and mother of twin girls. Who runs a thriving maternity clinic, helping other mother’s place their babies with well to do families.
When her mother who she cut all ties with unexpectedly shows up at her door with absurd demands. Her prefect crafted life is in danger.
She has to come clean to her husband , is heart broken and demands to know why Grace hasn’t told him all these years that her parents weren’t dead and that she had a baby before her twins. life as she knows is slowing break down.

Find out how she deal with it’s all in this
story that’s addresses issues of family relationships, marriage, parenting and cultural expectations.
Profile Image for ♡Joan Vegas♡.
70 reviews
March 30, 2026
Grace is a Nigerian novel set in Lagos State that tells a deeply emotional and layered story.

We meet Grace, a wife and mother of twin girls, who has quietly kept a personal tradition for 26 years—celebrating with a large cake every year, a secret even her husband doesn’t know about. That ritual is tied to a life-changing event from her past, one that continues to shape who she is.

Now working as a midwife, Grace is passionate about helping mothers and young girls dealing with unwanted pregnancies. Her work reflects her past, and as the story unfolds, we begin to understand the weight of the secrets she carries.

While I found the book interesting and engaging, I couldn’t help but notice similarities with the author’s other book, The Middle Daughter, especially with the “fake hospital” storyline. It kept pulling my thoughts back to that story while reading.



That said, this novel is rich with themes of secrets, past mistakes, loss of identity, forgiveness, and love 😘 It’s an emotional read that still manages to keep you invested.
Profile Image for ivy ⋆。˚ ❀ *.
31 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 8, 2026
This novel touches on some deep topics, namely: pregnancy, motherhood, sacrifice, and forgiveness. But Unigwe writes in a such an emotive way, which feels authentic and true to the experience of a woman. I particularly enjoyed the passages where Grace navigates her own morality.

Although the direction of the novel was somewhat predictable (perhaps until the end which I thought was rushed), it flows beautifully from past to present, and delves into the nuances of families, Nigerian culture and motherhood well - all of which I loved.

There are quiet moments, but as the story unfolds you’re able to feel sad, angry, and confused alongside Grace. I wish we learned more about the other characters in Grace’s life, but I suppose the book is named after her after all.

This won’t be my last novel by Chika Unigwe. Thank you to NetGalley and Canongate Books for the opportunity to read this ARC.
20 reviews1 follower
February 4, 2026
This is a review of Grace by Chika Unigwe. Many thanks to Canongate for the ARC.
The novel is set in Nigeria, and follows our protagonist Grace between two timelines. We meet her in 1993 as a shy and naive teen in love with a boy who doesn’t take care of her emotionally or physically, and again in 2020, when Grace is a pragmatic mother and wife who acts as a crusader for pregnant teens: she cares for them and secures their financial futures by procuring wealthy families for their newborns.
The curated world Grace has crafted is shattered when her mother appears after years of estrangement. Grace’s husband is shocked to discover that his in-laws are living, and that Grace had a teen pregnancy she concealed. He leaves her taking their twin daughters with him.
Ultimately the crisis resolves, a little neatly I felt. However, to go into such depths on the themes of motherhood, sex, pregnancy and a woman’s place in society in Nigeria in such a short book is truly impressive. An angry but tender reflection of grief, loss and forgiveness, this is an uplifting tale.


Profile Image for Leanne.
1,170 reviews102 followers
September 30, 2025
Grace is one of those quietly powerful novels that sneaks up on you and stays. It’s about secrets—the kind we bury deep, the kind that shape us—and the fragile hope of redemption.

Grace is a woman who’s built a life that looks perfect from the outside: a thriving clinic, twin daughters, a marriage that mostly works. But beneath it all is the ache of a daughter she gave up at fifteen, and the silence she’s kept ever since. When her estranged mother reappears, everything begins to unravel.

Chika Unigwe writes with such emotional precision. The story doesn’t shout—it pulses. It’s about motherhood, forgiveness, and the cost of survival. And it asks: what happens when the past refuses to stay buried?

If you love layered family dramas with heart and grit, this one’s a quiet stunner.

With thanks to Chika Unigwe, the publisher and NetGalley for the ARC.
Profile Image for Hannah Jung.
Author 1 book3 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 5, 2026

This is a story that examines the consequences of giving mothers little support - financial, parental or social. It takes the universal theme of motherhood and family dynamics, and explores it within the specific cultural setting of Nigeria.

Grace, who gave birth at fifteen and was made to abandon her baby by her parents so as not to “ruin” her life, ends up running a clinic which pays desperate women for their babies, making false birth certificates and giving them to wealthy clients - a baby factory basically.

When Grace is reunited with the baby 26 years later she has to reexamine the ethics of this, her trauma, her marriage and her career.

There were one or two twists towards the end which I thought were unnecessary, and the overall resolution felt quite rushed. Overall, though, I enjoyed it and found it thought-provoking.
Profile Image for Mosope.
108 reviews
March 31, 2026

3.75

is it a book i would actively rush to recommend? no
however, it is a very enjoyable and well written novel and i’d be open to reading more from this author.

the writing is very fast paced, the characters are well developed and i enjoyed the way in which we got to discover more about Baby’s and Grace’s past.

It would have been nice to have seen Grace’s parents and her discuss their decisions more, why they made those decisions and how they impacted her.

The novel included a lot of topics that were great for a book club i.e. classism in nigeria, shaming of unmarried pregnant women, forgiving your parents


Okika just deciding one day to come back pissed me off BUT also Grace was dead wrong so, I fear I understand.
I enjoyed that Ben wasn’t a part of the story, really. He didn’t deserve it.
Profile Image for Tanya.
355 reviews
May 4, 2026
I guess it was appropriate to read this book about motherhood just before Mother's day this weekend. When Grace falls pregnant at 15, her parents force her to leave her baby where someone will hopefully find her and take her home.

What follows is Grace's journey of trying to hide her grief and anger over the loss of her first born child, the lies and trying to build a life where she helps desperate women give their unwanted babies to wealthy couples.

It's a very thought provoking story about what women go through, the heartbreaking choices they're often forced to make and how they carry the burden of this guilt and loss alone because the fathers deny their role in the pregnancy. The ending was heartwarming and I'm glad Grace was able to find peace.

Thank you to Jonathan Ball Publishers for sending me a copy of this book. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Lara A.
666 reviews7 followers
November 28, 2025
Thank you to Netgalley for a complimentary copy.

This is the second Chika Unigwe novel I've read, the first being her debut On Black Sisters Street. This is a much lighter read than OBSS. A frequent complaint I have about Nigerian novels published in the West, is that they are often much of a muchness. For such a diverse country, most of the stories seem to be from the south of the country, feature only Igbo characters and culture and the plot generally derives from the tension between the haves and the have nots. All of this is true here, but Unigwe can make what could be rather two dimensional characters engaging. From her previous work, I was expecting this to go to darker places and it doesn't. Here you can judge a book by it's cover, it's as sweet as cake, yet still a tasty read.
Profile Image for Kofoworola Emily (Read Till You Drop).
86 reviews2 followers
December 30, 2025
ARC from NetGalley

I devoured this in one sitting while at the hairdresser's. It was a short and sweet story about grace (lol), redemption and restoration. I enjoyed that it was well-written and not as heavy as the author could have very easily made it. 

I was traumatised by The Middle Daughter, and I kept waiting for heavier shoes to drop; for Grace to really suffer more than she already had. Things didn't really happen in the way I thought they would, but it turned out to be a good thing.

I really liked this and am looking forward to owning a print copy.
Profile Image for Ms.Doreene.
43 reviews
February 4, 2026
Grace is a reflection of our society

I have an auto-buy plan for Chika Unigwe. Anything Chika writes, I will read and Grace was no exception.
I went in blindly and I’m glad I did because the book is beautifully written. It’s a story that, despite everything going on, acknowledges that we really did live through 2020 and the pandemic.
A book that shows how society fails women and girls.
Is a secret too big if it’s not over 20 years old? Is there really such a thing as a secret between two or more people? You all need to read this book.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews