“An entirely new mixed-race narrative that truly befits our 21st century . . . layers 4 generations upon 3 continents with 3 languages spoken and 2 cultural belief systems intertwining, all infusing life into one truly American woman, unapologetic, who refuses to see any aspect of her heritage or life experience as more important or meaningful than the other. An exultant celebration—in language and in form—of the complex intermixture at the heart of the American experience itself and in the hearts of countless Americans.”—Julie Lythcott-Haims, New York Times bestselling author of How to Raise an Adult and Real American“What does it mean to lose, and then recreate from fragments of . . . ‘dreams, film clips, lists, photos, and memories,’ the beloved voice that has seemingly vanished? Her Voice is a poignant, powerful and ultimately triumphant project of inexorable love. A beautiful, breathtaking smorgasbord. . . . A feast for the heart.”—Susan Kiyo Ito, author of I Would Meet You Anywhere: A Memoir, National Book Critics Circle Award finalist“Faith Adiele has written an astonishing book—[a] coming-of-age memoir—that defies easy classification because it is finally a memoir of the soul. Adiele’s witty, painfully candid, and always sharp-eyed account leads the reader to a most profound spiritual and human truth: There is ‘no easy, static answer’ to the question, ‘What are you?’”—Richard Rodriguez, author of Brown: The Last Discovery of America“Rooted in childhood, culture, and the diary of her grandmother, Her Voice, takes us on a cinematic journey back in time as Adiele searches for home. A hybrid memoir, woven over generations, Her Voice is the making of a film and a story of discovery that breathes dreams into reality.”—Tara Dorabji, author of Call Her Freedom, winner of the Like Us First Novel Prize from Simon & Schuster“Literal fusion: the process of joining two or more things to form a single entity. Innovative, original, Adiele sets off a literary bomb between two worlds, then mines the truth revealed in the explosion.”—Mat Johnson, author of Pym and Loving Day, a New York Times Notable Book, optioned by SHOWTIME“Engrossing, original. Adiele ushers us into the complications of race and identity in the 21st century.”—Toi Derricotte, author of The Black Notebooks