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Say Her Name cover art

Say Her Name

By: Dreda Say Mitchell, Ryan Carter
Narrated by: Adjoa Andoh
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Summary

‘My book of the year so far…’ —Lee Child, #1 New York Times bestselling author

In this chilling thriller from the bestselling authors of Spare Room, one woman just wants the truth about who she really is. But she’s not the only one looking…

It’s twenty years since Eva, a biracial woman, was adopted as an eight-year-old, and Cherry and Carlton ‘Sugar’ McNeil have always been the only parents she’s wanted or needed. But when she’s dealt the double blow of Cherry’s death and her own suspension from work, Eva decides it’s time to discover who she was before she was theirs.

Against Sugar’s advice, Eva joins a DNA database, desperate for a match that will unlock her identity. And when a positive hit comes, she’s excited to learn there are relations out there who might hold the key. But the closer Eva gets to uncovering her past, the more it appears someone is trying to stop her finally finding the truth…

As she continues to dig, Eva is drawn into a dark and merciless underside to society, where black women disappear without a word. Names erased from history, no search parties, no desperate pleas for their return. Once, someone tried to save Eva from all this. Someone wanted a better life for her. But now that she’s torn down the facade of her life, has she come too far to be spared again?

©2022 Mitchell and Joseph Ltd. (P)2022 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.

Critic reviews

“British actress Andoh (recently seen as Lady Danbury on Netflix’s Bridgerton) breathlessly navigates listeners through the tumultuous twists and turns of Eva’s investigation by modulating the speed and tone of her narration to ratchet up the suspense. Her dynamic performance as Eva and her expert juggling of other character accents make for a compelling and fast-paced listen.”Booklist

“Narrator Adjoa Andoh showcases her acting talents in portraying Eva, a woman in desperate search of her birth mother, and the women and men who are part of Eva's life. With appropriate pacing and intense emotion, Andoh expresses the tension and pain felt by the women she voices. Some of the most heartbreaking moments come in Andoh's masterful performance of young Eva's experiences in an orphanage.… This is a disturbing, slow-burn psychological thriller that keeps listeners engaged to the end.”AudioFile Magazine 

“A heartfelt and eloquent exploration of the iniquities of racial bias.”The Guardian 

What listeners say about Say Her Name

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Brilliant and highly recommended!!!

Yet another brilliantly read book by Adjoa. Although there are areas where the accent is wary/ off, it did not distract me from the story at all.

The story is powerful and kept me engaged through out, I did think it got a bit too predictable and farfetched, but hey, that's what makes a good thriller, right?

I do like the fact that it touches on what is out there in the world and, people are still too blind to it or simply want to ignore.....which is what makes the title and the constant repeat of the names the making of a powerful message./story.

Say her (their) names!!!

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Never forget

From the naming of names, sweeping through the heart wrenching grief of the dead and the missing and adding the thrill of mystery, I was transported and engrossed until the potent saying of names!!!

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Unputdownable? Or Unpauseable?

Loved the fast pace, good story and great narration. No loose ends. Re narration and accents, it's not uncommon for people to have a range in their everyday speech. Dominant in one accent and partly in another. That's how I heard it anyway.

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really enjoyed

wasn't sure at first but got into it very quickly and finished in 2 days , sad but unfortunately true to life.

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A good story, but....

The book started off as quite an engaging story. It became drawn out and repetitive in the middle, then picked up again towards the end.
The narrator kept changing the character's accents, which was incredibly annoying.

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Good story, poor character reading

I enjoy Dreada's books, but in this story the reader kept lilting out of Ronnie's and Sugar's accent into Marion's which was very confusing and annoying.
otherwise another great listen from Dreda.

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fairly enjoyable

narrator chose to use Jamaican type accents for several characters but then forgot who she was on numerous occasions and lost the accent, then suddenly remembered and put it on again. found it a bit distracting as once I'd noticed I kept waiting for it to happen. not a bad story though

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Brilliant story


only downside to an otherwise brilliant story was the narration. the narrator kept slipping into the.wrong accents, which I found a bit off putting.

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Hooray: beyond crime, way beyond crime

And into social justice into the way people want and need to feel, be treated in their neighbourhoods. It’s a new genre: neighbourhood social justice that reaches back into the oldest inter generational traumas of slavery, racism and how they impact contemporary life: children, teenagers, adults without inclusion and rights under privileged eyes
that are just as damaged. Brilliant!


Gripping, flowing, scary and detailed: the story of children, women and their journeys through a world set up to injure, harm and negate them cuts across time, age, class, ethnicity and gender. Here is the news and the news is art!
Well done Dreda and Ryan what an achievement.

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Beautifully narrated

I enjoyed this book, great story and home truths. There was some twists but the ending was expected. Do recommend it.

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