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OverviewUnder the scorching sun of Makola Market, survival is not a choice-it is a daily negotiation. Letsa learns this before she learns what childhood means. The sun rises early over the market, indifferent and unforgiving. It watches bodies bend beneath loads too heavy for their years. It listens to cries of labor and hunger without answering. And under this sun, a sixteen-year-old girl becomes a mother-not through love or readiness, but through abandonment, silence, and poverty. Under the Weight of the Sun is a gripping, deeply human novel about hunger, motherhood, and the quiet, unbreakable will it takes to stay alive when the world offers no mercy. Letsa carries food on her head for strangers who will never know her name. She earns coins too small to matter, yet heavy enough to decide whether her child eats or sleeps hungry. She learns quickly that effort does not guarantee reward, that pain is not always noticed, and that survival often demands silence. When her baby cries, and her body fails her-no milk, no rest, no relief-Letsa confronts a truth many live but few speak aloud: poverty does not only steal food; it steals dignity, choice, and time. Yet this is not a story that asks for pity. It is a story that demands recognition. From the chaos of Makola Market to the fragile shelter of a plywood home, Letsa's life unfolds through relentless labor, public judgment, and private fear. Every chapter traces the cost of endurance-the physical toll of carrying loads, the emotional toll of motherhood without support, and the psychological weight of knowing tomorrow may be worse than today. Hunger becomes a character in its own right-persistent, patient, and cruel. It interrupts sleep, poisons joy, and reshapes love. Motherhood, too, reveals itself not as a miracle alone, but as a sacrifice without applause. Letsa loves fiercely, even when love drains her body and threatens her sanity. When sickness strikes, and hospital walls replace market noise, the cost of breathing itself is itemized. Bills grow, time stretches and hope is taxed daily. Letsa discovers that survival within systems built against the poor requires more than strength-it requires resilience sharpened by choice. As debts replace illness, and obligation follows mercy, Letsa is forced to confront another truth: help often comes with conditions. Guidance carries weight. Kindness can demand obedience. And freedom is rarely free. Still, she persists. Years pass. Children grow. Pain hardens into wisdom. Survival evolves from instinct into strategy. When Letsa steps away from the market and into work with walls, structure, and dignity, stability feels foreign-almost undeserved. Trust becomes selective. Love becomes guarded. Motherhood reframes everything. And yet, under the same sun that once bent her neck, Letsa learns to stand differently. When she returns to the market-not as a porter, but as a witness-she sees herself reflected in other women still bent beneath loads. She understands now that survival alone is not enough. Purpose must follow endurance. Under the Weight of the Sun is a powerful literary journey that honors the millions whose struggles remain unseen. It speaks to mothers, daughters, workers, and anyone who has carried invisible burdens. It is a testament to resilience born not from privilege, but from necessity. This novel does not promise easy hope. It offers earned hope. Because strength is not given. It is carried. And passed on. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bilidag K ArdentPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.308kg ISBN: 9798246686560Pages: 226 Publication Date: 02 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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