Description
In the dust-stained village of Aguishi, a woman’s worth is measured by a single, unforgiving standard: the children she bears. Lewechi enters her marriage to the gentle, city-educated Chijioke carrying nothing but hope, dignity, and a love she believes will be enough. She is wrong. From the moment she steps into the family compound, she becomes the target of her mother-in-law’s relentless campaign of humiliation, branded publicly as a barren curse, a dry wood, a witch who consumes without giving. What no one knows, what the village refuses to ask, is whether the failure belongs to her at all.
When Chijioke dies suddenly in a road accident, the mask of tradition falls away entirely. Lewechi is stripped of her possessions, her hair, her dignity, and her legal standing in a single, brutal mourning period designed not to honor the dead but to destroy the living. Cast into a dusty storeroom with no rights and no future, she is the childless widow that custom has already erased.
But Lewechi carries something no one thought to confiscate: her mind. Armed with the quiet power of literacy and a secret her late husband left buried in a misspelt trust deed, she slips out of the compound under the cover of night and returns to the city to reclaim everything that was taken from her. What follows is a story of razor-sharp legal strategy, hard-won financial independence, and the slow, deliberate construction of a life that no tradition, no mother-in-law, and no village court can ever dismantle.
The Travails is a compelling, emotionally devastating novel about the cost of silence, the cruelty hidden inside custom, and one woman’s refusal to remain a footnote in her own story. For readers who love fierce heroines, cultural drama, and justice earned on hard terms.


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