Selected Product: | A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children Hardcover Author: Caroline Kennedy Publisher: Hyperion Book CH Release Date: 2005-09-15 ISBN-10: 0786851112 ISBN-13: 9780786851119 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children ISBN-10: 0786851112 ISBN-13: 9780786851119 List Price:$19.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children by Caroline Kennedy (ISBN-10: 0786851112, ISBN-13: 9780786851119). At this time we have not yet written a review for A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children by Caroline Kennedy (ISBN-10: 0786851112, ISBN-13: 9780786851119). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com In 1957, Ryszard Kapuscinski arrived in Africa to witness the beginning of the end of colonial rule as the first African correspondent of Poland's state newspaper. From the early days of independence in Ghana to the ongoing ethnic genocide in Rwanda, Kapuscinski has crisscrossed vast distances pursuing the swift, and often violent, events that followed liberation. Kapuscinski hitchhikes with caravans, wanders the Sahara with nomads, and lives in the poverty-stricken slums of Nigeria. He wrestles a king cobra to the death and suffers through a bout of malaria.
What emerges is an extraordinary depiction of Africa--not as a group of nations or geographic locations--but as a vibrant and frequently joyous montage of peoples, cultures, and encounters. Kapuscinski's trenchant observations, wry analysis and overwhelming humanity paint a remarkable portrait of the continent and its people. His unorthodox approach and profound respect for the people he meets challenge conventional understandings of the modern problems faced by Africa at the dawn of the twenty-first century. A superb picture and analysis of contemporary Africa | Customer Rating: | Ryszard Kapuscinski (d. 2007) was one of the great journalists of the last half of the 20th Century. In the English-speaking world, he may be the most famous and highly regarded journalist who wrote in a language other than English. Kapuscinski characterized his craft not as journalism but as "literary reportage." THE SHADOW OF THE SUN certainly exemplifies the distinction.
THE SHADOW OF THE SUN is the product of four decades of work in Africa as a reporter for Polish media. But it is not the typical journalist's account. It is written with artistry, skill, and a very keen literary sensibility. (For my taste, however, Kapuscinski resorts to rhetorical questions to keep his narrative going far too frequently.)
As fine as the writing is, the real reason for reading THE SHADOW OF THE SUN is for its content. It consists of about thirty chapters, a few of which follow one another in a continuous narrative, but most of which stand alone as vignettes or accounts of discrete incidents or journalistic missions in spearate countries across the African continent. Among the countries visited are Ghana, Tanzania, Nigeria, Mauritania, Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Sudan, Somalia, Senegal, Ethipia, Liberia, Cameroon, Mali, and Eritrea. The composite effect is a compelling and sobering picture of Africa in the third of a century after the sudden dismantling of the colonial political structure. Although now ten years old (it was first published in Polish in 1998), I doubt that either the general picture or Kapuscinski's analytical insights are dated.
Probably the single most memorable "take" from the book is that in that third of a century, Africa became even "poorer and more wretched." The book is replete with snapshots of that poverty and misery, replete with examples that lead Kapuscinski to write that "Life here is a constant struggle, an endlessly repeated effort to tilt in one's favor the fragile, flimsy, and shaky balance between survival and extinction." Kapuscinski also offers, analytically and almost dispassionately, many reasons why Africa remains so poor and wretched, most of which, of course, have their roots in the colonization and exploitation by the West.
I second the opinion of others that THE SHADOW OF THE SUN is one of the very best books on Africa. Indeed, taking into account its readability and literary merit, it is, to my knowledge, the single best short book on that continent.
| One of my all-time favorites on Africa! | Customer Rating: | | As always, Kapuscinski sheds a unique and insightful light on African conflicts - from the civilian perspective. | The best short book if you want to understand something about Africa | Customer Rating: | | This in my view is by far the best insight into what Africa is produced by a white man. Kapuscinski's perspective is different in that he is not from Britain, or France or other colonial power, or white man of Africa. He brings a different perspective to the usual selection of post-colonial literature. His skill of observation is incredible. After visiting and working in quite a few countries in Africa, I still find his perspective very insightful. His writing grabs you and you can't put down the book. If you want a short wise book, which reads easily and gives you a good idea of what Africa was/is ... this is the book. | Mesmerizing | Customer Rating: | | I could not put this book down. Poetic, persistent, compelling, a beautiful and sobering book about the African experience in recent history. Based on this book I am eager to read every book he has published. | Excellent if sober portrait of Africa | Customer Rating: | Shadow of the Sun
Excellent introduction to the African continent. The author's writing is clear and beautiful. He writes in a way that richly evokes the images and experiences that he is going through, but his writing is light and to-the-point, not burdened with unnecessary or long-winded description. A master of writing style.
What also helps is that Kapuchinski truly has great insight into the people, systems, and cultures he encounters, and his experiences are truly unique and exciting because he was courageous enough to go where most white people did not.
The only "flaw" of this book was, for me, the fact that the overall picture of the African continent and its people was rather depressing. One finishes this book and despairs a bit for the future of Africa. It is all understandable: such great poverty, such unjust leadership systems, such corruption and rule of brute force, such lack of education and learning...how can things ever get better?
This feeling of desolation is what is leaning me against reading another of Kapuchinski's books, at least anytime soon. Moreover, although he wrote about lots of different places, the stories to some extent begin to sound very similar - they are mostly stories of brutality, oppression, injustice, poverty and hunger, lack of security, and random violence. Sure, the details of the "how" differ - but the "what" is quite similar. While I suppose that is the reality for a large part of Africa, I can't help feeling that once I have read one book like that, I already know to some extent what the next one will say. |
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