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Footsteps by: Umm Zakiyyah Book size: 5.5" x 8.5", 352 pages
Retail price: $19.99
The journey began in If I Should
Speak with Tamika Douglass's path of spiritual growth and direction,
treaded at the hands of her college roommates, Aminah and Dee, two
Muslims on opposite ends of their strength in Islam. Footsteps, the
third in a trilogy to follow Umm Zakiyyah's A Voice, is a story that
stands on its own in both impact and inspiration. At the heart of
the novel is the story of Ismael, a forty-seven-year-old biracial
son of a White mother and Black father, and Sarah, a
forty-nine-year-old White daughter of the racist South. Married for
twenty-six years and having accepted Islam on a journey they took
together, the Ali pair has what every partnership hopes to achieve.
Stability, dedication, and a comfortable life. As the story unfolds,
the hairline fractures in their marriage become visible, and the
fractures become splintering cracks as Sarah discovers a detrimental
secret her husband has kept from her for four months. In the face of
his wife's discovery, Ismael is torn between the love and security
of his marriage, and the natural inclinations any man must temper in
a world full of choices, and devastating consequences. Forming the
thread that weaves the characters' lives together is Alika Mitchell,
a strikingly beautiful daughter of a mulatto mother and
half-Nigerian father, who is conducting a multicultural research for
her master's, and who inspires in the reader questions that one is
left to ponder long after the book is closed.
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