The Dark Child
F**N
Amazing book and I recommend it to everyone who love Africa to read it !!
This book is amazing, I had ears in my eyes reading this wonderful book. I recommend it to everyone. There are a deep reflection and fondamental value of African society in this book. Thank you millions times Camaraley for this book !
A**H
A relative
Camera Laye is the brother of my Paternal Grand Mother. Laye is an African and Family treasure. It is only right that I own and read his works. He is a good author in his right.
B**N
Tale from Guinea; Inspirational Book
Daughter purchased for a college class; she recommended it to my wife after reading. The novel follows the main character, Laye, and describes his journey/coming of age in Guinea (Africa) . It's a poignant tale showing how family and culture shaped his values, inspired his education, and contributed to his fate. This is one of the few books my daughter has kept in her college library - second book from top.
A**R
Literature of the World.
Excellent quality and delivery time. I look forward to reading this autobiography. Thank you Amazon for allowing many such as myself the opportunity to build a library of world literature.
A**R
Good read
This book was a good read and it came just in time for what I needed it in the classroom.
T**A
The Dark Child
I just love this book! I read it in High School as a Literature test book. I decided to take my time and go through the book now as an adult. It came on time also,
E**Y
3.5 stars
Not much happens in this gentle, sentimental little book, but it's a pleasant read all the same. There seems to be some disagreement about whether The Dark Child is a memoir or an autobiographical novel; my library shelves it as nonfiction, though given the abundant dialogue, the author clearly took some creative license.Either way, it's a nicely-written coming-of-age story of a boy from in a traditional village in Guinea in the 1930s and 40s. There are no atrocities, no violence (except from bullies at school), no political themes: you would not know from Laye's writing that Guinea was under French rule at the time, gaining its independence only after this book's publication in the 1950s. Other characters drift in and out of the story, but more than anything it's the story of the author's relationship with his own culture. In the first chapter, his mother introduces him to a snake that visits his father in his workshop - "the guiding spirit of our race," the parents explain. No one sees any conflict between their superstitions, and his mother's mysterious powers, and their Muslim beliefs. Later chapters are spent on harvest and coming-of-age rituals. Only toward the end does Laye leave the village to study. It's a nostalgic story, developing at a graceful, measured pace, with perhaps a bit of stereotyping for the benefit of foreign readers, though at the time apparently any portrayal of life in Africa as calm and cheerful was groundbreaking. For that matter, it's hardly common now.At any rate, I'm not falling over myself to recommend this, but I enjoyed it and consider it worth reading. A solid 3.5 stars.
R**1
Love it. Grew up with the French version. I am thrilled that my children can read it.
Bought for my kids.
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