
"At its core, Into the Go-Slow is a love story-romantic love, love of family, love of culture, love of self.

Into the Go-Slow is a page turner, and never loses sight of its daring protagonist, a young woman on the cusp of adulthood, searching for the legacy of the sister she has lost to era of change." -Ayana Mathis, author of The Twelve Tribes of Hattie "Davis's novel asks the big questions reverberating through the African-American community in the wake of the 1980s: Who are we now? What is Africa to us? Homeland or fantasy? You'd think the magnitude of the subject matter would eclipse the story-telling, but you'd be wrong. A strong book." -Chris Abani, author of The Secret History of Las Vegas Davis has created a beautiful allegory at the heart of a realist novel-an allegory of love, family, expansion, hope, and transformation-all of it worked out compassionately and with integrity in the only country that offers both allegory and realism-Nigeria. It is on this transatlantic journey that Angie discovers not only who her sister really was, but ultimately, herself. Angie, the youngest daughter, travels from 1980s Detroit to Lagos, Nigeria after her estranged older sister Ella mysteriously dies there. Into the Go Slow is a novel about a family in Detroit in the aftermath of the Black Power Movement.
