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A Book For Sharing Culture and Transgenerational Stories
Beautiful grandma/mother/daughter book
Quinnie Blue is true

Longing to return, or who are you, Mrs. Robinson?Mustafa was a posthumous child. He and his mother were each other's only relatives. From childhood Mustafa felt that he was different from others. Mustafa agreed to go to school just when they were first being started by the colonizers for village youth. He had a wonderful ability to memorize his lessons. His teachers admired him as a prodigy, but he paid them no mind. After three years he had exhausted the country's academic resources. He was advised to study abroad. It was arranged that he depart for Cairo to attend secondary school. In Cairo he stayed with Mr. and Mrs. Robinson. He paid no attention to the love they showered on him. He learned music and literature in Cairo, but enjoyed nothing.
Later he went to England where he killed Jean Morris. Possibly he ws the cause of Ann Hammond's suicide and the deaths of others. He was appointed a lecturer in economics at London University at age twenty four. Mustafa died, the but narrator, in his work at the minstry of education, keeps running into him since he had been a most brilliant and notorious student. The narrator, Effendi, is guardian of Mustafa Sa-eed's wife and children. Mustafa was the first student from Sudan to study in Cairo and England. (He dies from drowning at some point between the narrator's visits to the village and to his grandfather.) Unfortunately his wife kills a geriatric suitor and then kills herself. She had threatened violence if forced into a situation against her will. She had wanted to marry the narrator, the guardian of her sons, but he had been disinclined to take her as a second wife.
In Mustafa Sa-eed's house the narrator comes upon many books of zoology, mathematics, astronomy, geology, economics, history, fiction poetry, sociology, anthropology, psychology, philosophy, and political science--all seemingly products of a superior English education. There are no books in Arabic. Why did his women companions commit suicide? The women projected on him dark and strange emotions. Mrs. Robinson wrote to the narrator that he was a tortured child and was the dearest thing that happened to her husband and to herself. Drawings by Mustafa Sa-eed revealed real talent. The narrator had the sense that Mustafa Sa-eed wanted to be discovered, that he wanted the narrator to sort through his things and begin to understand him. Jean Morris was being unfaithful to him. He felt that the tragedy had to play itself out. She kissed the dagger he he held, fervently, urging him on. Tragedy ensued.
The novel is expressive. It recounts the sort of trials an extraordinary person might encounter who embarks upon life hobbled by emotional fragility and compelled to thread his way between two cultures.
Timeless Classic - A DreamSeemingly a simple story develops into a complex character study weaved in with issues of colonialism in African countries, the effect of economics on the distrubution of wealth in the world, the meaning of economics as an academic discipline, and most importantly a quest for a personal and cultural identity - the paradox of diaspora.
The work is beautifully translated, as the reader will notice thus contributing to its lyrical and precise execution in which every word counts. The format in which the work is presented might confuse a few people but is highly relevant to the character and plot development.
For those familiar with Ralph Ellison's "Invisible Man" this will prove to be a worthwhile read which takes the concepts adressed in Ellison's work to a next level.
Also recommended is a film "The Wedding in Galilee" for further deconstruction and interpretation.
Season of Migration to the North

Brilliant
Seeker's Progress
Desperately seeking something

Standing On Holy Ground: A Triumph Over Hate Crime in the DeBetty Wilson Beamguard
A Tribute to Truth, Determination, Faith & Courage
"A Masterpiece!"Through telling of how diverse people banded together to rebuild St. John Baptist Church, Sandra Johnson shows the world that love, faith, hope and a spirit of unity can come together to work miracles. It is a message that she proclaims to us all and we're the better for it.


Lots of useful info!
All The "Insider Secrets" Revealed
Success is YoursThis book will help many to gain a higher level of success by helping people to focus on the 10 key steps of business building.


Brilliant, gritty crime fiction
It don't get mo' better than this
Great!

Be ready!
EJ..incredible work,,,great novel,,,to exciting to put down
Earl Johnson has written a masterpiece!!!!!

The Shadow Knows (1977 Textbook Old Time Radio Scripts)This is not a review of the Romance Novel by Diane Johnson. This is a review of the 1977 School Textbook "The Shadow Knows" it is a book of Old Time Radio Scripts of the radio series The Shadow.
ISBN: 0-673-03533-6
The Shadow was on the air from 1937 until 1954 one of the longest running Mystery/ Drama series from radio's best and brightest years.
The Text book has many many episodes that do not survive other than in script form. This book is out of print so if you are a fan of the Shadow, and want to read episodes that are 'truly' lost. Find this book. It's out of print and quite hard to find but worth the effort.
Wry, Tongue-in-Cheek Tale That Can Reach Many WomenThe protagonist speaks in the first person. It is the voice of a middle-class American housewife of the '60s. She is thoughtful and sensitive; she is perceptive; she is mild mannered--even a little self-effacing. She is a devoted and nurturing mother of several kids. She has a warm, gentle, bemused jenny-wren-like quality, not unlike many women we have known and loved.
She is recently divorced from her husband because they were emotionally incompatible.
Here's where the story starts to veer slightly to the left of center. The protagonist, although apparently middle class, is living in a public housing development, because divorce has left her in financial straits with several children to raise. And the character seems to become more anomalous when she starts getting death threats. She gets threatening telephone calls, finds dead animals placed on her car windshield, and threatening amulets in her mailbox. This gentle, mild-mannered, self-effacing, healthy, normal, and conscientious woman is being threatened with death.
For the rest of the novel, our heroine casts about in her thoughts, memories, and fantasies, with greater and greater intensity, to think of who might want to kill her.
And as she ponders this mystery, she puts together a longer and longer list of people who might like to kill her.
At this point, we begin to see the black humor peeping out of the structure of this novel, somewhat akin to ARSENIC AND OLD LACE. Femininity, daintiness, nurturance poised against death and violence.
And this is where the novel finally becomes most radical, most improbable, most bizarre. A wry, subtle humor becomes more and more apparent, as we realize that no matter how truly sweet, how mild mannered, how gentle, how nurturing this prototypical woman is, she still has a very long list of people who would like to kill her.
Diane Johnson makes us want to know who the culprit is, and at the same time she has us laughing and nodding in recognition--that women in general have many virulent enemies--even a woman of valor and sweetness; that the most stable, sane, and healthy people have bizarre currents running underneath their lives and threatening to engulf them.
And that, along with the author's brilliant writing style--is what endeared this book to me. The author tells a profound truth about the human condition: Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The threat does not just encompass the male of the species--it includes women.
Stays in the mind for a long long time

Creative Things for Versatile ShortBreadFrom sweet type most of us have come to love with coffee, tea or just cold glass of milk, she adds savory items, i.e. a great recipe with Corn and Pumpkin Seeds or Carmelized Shallots.
There are many here that are simply wundebar, e.g. Meyer Lemon-Macademia or Drambuie-Raisin. If you're a shortbread fancier, this is neat collection to use and inspire one's own creations.
Shortbread magic!This book is definitely worth its price! Buy it, you'll love it!
A delicious book!!

This is such a GREAT book to read!This book is a homorous book. I think third, fourth, and fifth graders would like this book. I like this book because I like school and this book took place in school.
The Sub
The Best Book
This book does an excellent job of conveying a family life where the stories passed through the generations matter so much that the grandchildren DO in fact dream and wonder about the lives of their grandparents. I want for my daughter to dream and wonder, too.
As the adoptive father of a biracial girl, I think this is a good book for conveying a part of her cultural heritage that she may not get to experience much first hand.