*3.5 stars *
Imagine, as a mum, leaving all you’ve ever known behind, and starting a new life in a strange country with three young children - your husband still in Nigeria, to follow later. This is how it was for Otegha Uwagba’s mum. Leaving sunny Nigeria, for a grey depressing London - grey weather, grey buildings everywhere, to new customs and cultures, in a class obsessed society - trying to find work and lodgings, discovering how everything works. This was a family that had love in abundance, but were not so secure financially. So, right from a young age, Otegha was aware of the importance of money, and the need to manage one’s finances.
Though the family was of modest means, one thing they did have plenty of, was books - books of every description, along with educational visits to museums and galleries, as Otegha’s parents were both educated to degree standard, they wanted the same for their children, and Otegha being an exceptionally gifted child, gained a scholarship to a private school, with a prized place at Oxford to follow.
This is a searingly honest and personal memoir, about how money (or the lack of it) affects lives, and it also gives an insight into office politics, highlighting issues such as ‘lads’ culture, race and gender, and how all these issues can affect your promotional prospects, and therefore potential earnings. Interesting read.
*Thank you to Netgalley and Fourth Estate, for an ARC in exchange for an honest unbiased review *