Mother of Floods
Description:
The future depends on our courage; reaching past barriers of expectations, culture, and geographies to find each other. Nina-Iraq magazine's founder, journalist, and storytelling consultant Madeleine F White shapes our expectations of women's economic empowerment, with her sometimes real, sometime speculative journeys through the UK, Africa and Asia as we encounter an extraordinary array of exceptional women in her debut novel Mother of Floods. Unlike academic research papers and books, White doesn't just showcase these women's struggles against terrible circumstances. Instead, a hopeful dystopian narrative encourages the reader's imaginings to meet with her own, so encouraging a co-created resolution which is still grounded in her own international development experience. Mother of Floods moves the characters we are introduced to beyond mere terminologies and statistics into worlds of their own making? and ours. "I have come to believe sometimes fiction is far more powerful than factual journalism and reporting in terms of getting to the truth of a situation," shares White, a consultant who to continues works in international development and creative partnerships to connect diverse communities through storytelling. "These stories are based on the amazing truths real women have shared with me. Pragmatic, moral and fierce in turn - cultures, backgrounds and geographies may differ. What connects though, is the way they lead their communities into shaping their own destinies. It illustrates what I truly believe; that collectively, we can make change happen." This stunning debut is underpinned by strands of ancient and modern mythology, exploring what it means to be human in the 21st century as digital, physical, and spiritual worlds collide. The interlocking narratives of Martha Johnstone and her dead husband Dave, who lives on in digital form; Anjani, an Indonesian Mogul who finds herself investing in Mercy's Zimbawean micro-business and Fatima, the abused teenage bride who finds safety in a tucked away Baghdad garden, become a battle for the soul of the world. Mother of Floods makes connections between the spiritual, technological, and human worlds, leapfrogging towards a transformative energy that infects the digital world and ultimately creates a new kind of being. The novel will appeal to readers of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale and The Testaments, as well as development professionals who consider Half the Sky and Poor Economics mandatory reading. A final word from Sue Lawton, MBE; Global expert on women and enterprise, WEConnect International Advisory Board Member and part of the UN High Level Panel Women's Economic Empowerment: "What a remarkable book. Totally different to most anything else I have read. Perhaps the Philip Pullman Northern Lights is as close as I can get but even that is not the same. Would I recommend it? Definitely; it builds depth, richness and empathy into the concepts development professionals grapple with daily."