Winnie Akinyi Oduor grew up in Homa Bay on Lake Victoria after being born on 30 June 1991 in Nairobi. When her father lost his job, the family moved to Ugunja. At the age of twenty-one, Winnie travelled alone to Nairobi, leaving her one-year-old son with her parents, and looked for work. She first earned a living as a promoter in supermarkets, then trained in counselling, social work and community development, and worked for LVCT Health in HIV prevention. At home, the family stuck together: her mother, who had an amputated leg and later became seriously ill; her father, who had prostate cancer; and her son, who had to learn to call her Mum because work and distance took up so much of her time. In 2025, Winnie takes a job as a domestic worker in Oman. Between the kitchen and the Corniche, telephone windows and money transfers, between rice that is honestly washed and nightly conversations about clinic visits in Ugunja, she finds a quiet ethic: work with purpose instead of fear, boundaries set early and kindly, networks that hold. The novel weaves together personal life stages with the political lines of East Africa since 1991 and tells of how dignity arises in everyday life. A quiet, resistant book about responsibility, migration, care and the right to find one's own rhythm.
Winnie Akinyi Oduor, born on 30 June 1991 in Nairobi, grew up in Homa Bay on Lake Victoria and moved to Ugunja as a teenager. At the age of 21, she went to Nairobi to support her son and parents financially. This is her first book, in which she recounts her experiences. She initially worked in retail and then trained in counselling, social work and community development. She then worked for LVCT Health. In 2025, she took a job as a domestic worker in Oman. Her experiences between family, gainful employment, education and migration shape her literary voice. Winnie lives between Ugunja and Muscat and is committed to safe working conditions, educational opportunities and respectful language around care work.
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