Misfortune continues to fall on the poor girl who , impelled by Marcia and Donna steals uncle Mariam, a friend of the young Sade which we later learned that she had a terrible life, similar to the young Nigerian .
Early Solaja feels guilty for his gesture .
Shortly after , Mama Appiah teaches children that their father was able to come to London but he had no passport and is therefore in prison.
Femi and his sister make alongside their father and try to find a way to get him out of prison.
They go to Seven O'Clock News where they tell their story .
They talk about their father on television.
After this, people come to their aid to help their father for the first time , the children meet their uncle Dele .
Their father began a hunger strike .
The story ends with the release of his father for Christmas, if the seeker has not yet been granted, they hope to one day return safely to Niger .
Its former life and his grandmother fail to Sade.
To end the book, Beverley Naidoo uses a letter from Sade to his grandmother who is very touching.
Several themes comprise the book :
-her encounter with the other in the encounter between the many characters such as Ms. Graham and children or Mariam and Sade
-and travel, initiatory journey , exile because as we know, the Solaja are immigrants from Niger