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OVERVIEW The invasion begins! Pint sized soldiers are storming your country - do you have what it...

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In 1915, Thomas Edison proclaimed that he could record a live performance and reproduce it...

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Almost forty years after moving to Manhattan, author Richard Morris has achieved if not...

Coursera: Top online courses
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Learn on the go with the free Coursera App for iPhone and iPad. Access more than 2,000 courses and...

Switch & Cut Me In - Photo Background Color Eraser
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Updated & intelligent cutout software——Cut me in! You can easily cut out persons, objects in a...

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OVERVIEW The invasion begins! Pint sized soldiers are storming your country - do you have what it...

Touch Retouch: Blur Photo Edit
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Touch Retouch - The power of simple Instagram photo retouching for everyone, anywhere. This free...

Stolen Goods (To Catch a Thief #2)
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Catch Me If You Can meets Tangled in this funny and feel-good romantic comedy, new from bestselling...
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Battlelands Royale
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Made for mobile, Battlelands Royale is a casual Battle Royale game for everyone to enjoy. With 32...

ClareR (5869 KP) rated Soul Sisters in Books
Feb 25, 2022
Jen and Kemi become ‘soul sisters’, perhaps closer than real sisters would be. Even thought their lives are very different (Kemi becomes a surgeon, Jen works in the art world), they never lose that bond. Until, that is, a man comes between them.
Solam Rhoyi. He’s a black South African financier who wants to go into politics - and he wants to be really successful.
The feelings of Kemi and Solam were conveyed really well, and their need for identity as ‘exile kids’; the political aspect was interesting and it didn’t have too much romance (which is just how I like it: some, but not an overwhelming amount!). Other themes were family, secrets, race and power.
I really enjoyed the background to this story, and the hints as to why Kemi and Jen’s family had such a close bond. I loved the South African setting, and how, as the reader, I got to see a little of what goes on in hospitals and in politics. I wish we’d got to see a little more of the consequences of some of the huge events, both personal and political. There was a bit too much of jumping years ahead for me. Perhaps it would have been better as a duology (as some other reviewers have said). I absolutely would have read it!