| Weep Not, Child (African Writers) |  | Author: Ngugi wa Thiong'o Publisher: Heinemann Category: Book
List Price: $12.95 Buy Used: $1.29 as of 3/13/2010 12:34 EST details You Save: $11.66 (90%)
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Seller: excellentpricebooks Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 478,858
Media: Paperback Pages: 144 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 0.4
ISBN: 0435908308 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780435908300 ASIN: 0435908308
Publication Date: April 30, 1988 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This is a simple and powerful tale of the effects of the Mau Mau war on individuals and families in Kenya.
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| Customer Reviews: Quick, easy read July 17, 2006 GooPonch (So Cal, USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This was a quick read portraying the struggles of a young boy coming of age in Kenya with the onset of the Mau Mau uprising and the opression that led to it. The novel's simplicity may make it seem like an elementary book, but this is what makes it genuine and a good beginning for anyone who is just starting to learn about the atrocities that happened throughout white man's rule of Africa and what is still going on today. It's not hard to see why Ngugi was so wrongfully punished for his bringing these events to the forefront as he definitely was making some point-blank political statements (and very brave).
Not his best work December 8, 2008 J. D Morrow (Somerville, MA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Njoroge is a Gikuyu boy who is enters into a western school. He feels that education is the only path for him to help his family, his village and his country. Yet, his dreams get destroyed. The Mau Mau uprising sends his proletariat brothers into the forest killing settlers and trying to get England to leave Kenya.
Ngugi's characterization of the uprising and the people involved is quite interesting. Some characters are connected with the Mau Mau not because of high-minded ideals but because of personal grievances with others. The white characters are considered outsiders by the Gikuyu but consider themselves Africans.
Njoroge becomes the synthesis character. Through his education he connects with the colonizers; he has a romantic connection with the collaborating chief's daughter; and, at home he is connected to Gikuyu past. He predicts that "tomorrow" there will be a new Kenya and he and the chief's daughter will be the foundation of it.
Weep Not, Child is Ngugi's first novel and it reads like one. His next novel "The River Between," with a similar message, is a far better work. I would not make this a "must read."
The Plight of the African people April 4, 2000 21 out of 30 found this review helpful
"Weep Not, Child" chronicles a young boy, Njoroge, as he grows up admist the Mau Mau war and the conflict between the African natives and the British colonial rulers. The book is in essence about the hopes and dreams of a young boy coming being affected by the outside world and how the outside world changes a person.The novel also addresses the political conflict that was occurring in Kenya in the 1950's. The author incorporates a description of the power of the white rulers, the bitterness of the Africans at being enslaved on their own land and their attempt to rise up against the tyranny, and finally deals with the poor relations between the blacks and Indian merchants, who are looked down upon by the black community. I read this novel as a part of my IB English class. We read this book in combination with "1984" (Orwell). It was a very powerful story when it dealt with Njoroge's life, his thoughts and his feelings but due to the length of the novel (136 pages) one only gets a fairly superficial explanation of the historical and cultural context of the book. Also, this novel is a book in translation, so some of the sentence and grammatical structure can be a bit tricky at times. All in all, a very good book.
Weep not, child January 31, 2007 Jennifer Riggs (Brisbane, Australia) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
The story concerns itself with an important period in the life of the author's tribe in Kenya in the 1950's - the Mau Mau Emergency at a time when I myself lived in Kenya. It does not pretend to be other than a subjective fictional account and yet is more accurate than the recent supposed historical account by Caroline Elkins, outrageously inaccurate as that is. Ngugi's book goes to the heart of a young boy whose burning desire is to get an education at a time when conflict and killing were all around him. It is beautifully and simply told with a very authentic 'young' voice.
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