Keep Well, Go Well

I just finished listening to the audio book of Alan Paton’s  Cry, The Beloved Country. This is a wonderful book in whatever format it is experienced.  However, the reader of the audio book was absolutely perfect, pegging the South African accents of various peoples.

The book was published in 1948 and set in 1946.  It is a book of many flavors including that of a cautionary tale.  Knowing a little of the history of South Africa after  Continue reading “Keep Well, Go Well”

One Day I Will Write About This Place by Binyavanga Wainaina

OneDayIWillWriteAboutThisPlaceWhen I think about describing this book the phrase, “utterly delicious”, comes to mind. Initially I had a hard time getting into the book. Wainaina has a unique way with language. While the story is linear, the prose is borderline stream of consciousness. Once I gathered in the rhythm of the language, the harmony emerged. Certain passages were pure umami tantalizing the brain much like a morel does the tongue.

The Kenya described therein is an olio of languages.

“There are many understood ways to address someone: sometime you shift quickly into English; often you speak in a mock Kiswahili, in an ironical tone, simply to indicate that you are not dogmatic about language, that you are quite happy to shift around and find the bandwidth of the person to whom you are speaking.”  

The book is like this too. It weaves in little snippets of African languages that give you a feel of time and place. Many words seem to be a mash-up of English and a tribal language.

This is a memoir. It is a coming-of-age story. Continue reading “One Day I Will Write About This Place by Binyavanga Wainaina”