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Miriam's
Song
Dust Jacket and Reviews
Think of this
book as "Kaffir Girl" -- the powerful memoir of a young black woman coming
of age in South Africa amid the violence of apartheid, beautifully written by
her brother, the best-selling author of Kaffir Boy.
Mark
Mathabane first came to prominence with the publication of Kaffir Boy,
which became a New York Times bestseller. His story of growing up in
South Africa is one of the most riveting accounts of life under apartheid.
Mathabane's newest book, Miriam's Song, is the story of Mark's sister,
who was left behind in South Africa. It is the gripping tale of a woman --
representative of an entire generation -- who came of age amid the violence and
rebellion of the 1980s and finally saw the destruction of apartheid and the
birth of a new, democratic South Africa.
Mathabane writes in Miriam's voice based on stories she told
him, but he has re-created her unforgettable experience as only someone who also
lived through it could. The immediacy of the hardships that brother and sister
endured -- from daily school beatings to overwhelming poverty -- is balanced by
the beauty of their childhood observations and the true affection they have for
each other. Miriam emerges as both an innocent child drawn into the war against
apartheid and a strong woman forever changed by the struggles, brutality, and
politics of the world around her; Mark emerges once more as a writer of
extraordinary ability, sensitivity and insight.
Miriam's Song is memoir writing at its finest. With its courage,
determination, resilience, hope and faith, it is a truly inspirational story,
spectacularly told.
"Inspirational and often affecting...there is an
important message to this story."
-- The Winston-Salem Journal
"This memoir of growing up in South Africa during apartheid is
alternately
evocative and wrenching, but always inspiring...It captures both
the brutality and beauty of their childhood."
-- Glamour
From Kirkus
Reviews:
From the South African–born Mathabane (Kaffir Boy, 1986;
African Women, 1994, etc.) comes this unsparingly graphic account of his
sister's growing up in the last days of apartheid--when violence turned black
townships into killing fields and schooling ceased as young Comrades insisted on
liberation before education. The story told by Miriam, now studying in the US,
is a searing indictment of the violence to women engendered both by apartheid
and by traditional African attitudes. Both quashed human potential and
aspirations, and good daughters and students like Miriam were as penalized as
their more recalcitrant sisters. Born in 1969 and raised in Alexandria, a
sprawling black township to the north of Johannesburg, Miriam offers vivid
details of township life: the food eaten (a whole chicken was an undreamed-of
luxury), the small houses (spotless despite the number of people living in
them), and the ubiquitous scrawny dogs picking over the uncollected trash. She
describes growing up as the middle daughter in a family made dysfunctional by
circumstance. Her illiterate father, unable to find better-paying jobs, is often
unemployed, drinks, gambles away their food money, and beats the children; her
mother, a devout Christian, lacks the proper documentation and also has
employment problems; and her elder brother steals Miriam's savings. The black
schools are poorly equipped, the teachers are sadistic, and Miriam (who wants to
become a nurse) soon finds her ambition thwarted by the times and by custom. A
teenager in the 1980s, when anti-government violence made life in townships
dangerous, she has to stay home when the schools are forced to close. Then, in a
society where black men traditionally are free to do as they please (to take
13-year-old girls for wives, for example, as one of her uncle does), she is
raped by her boyfriend and finds herself pregnant. But brother Mark, who has
used his tennis talents as a passport to the US and success, will change
Miriam's life. A moving story of a survivor. -- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus
Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Buy Miriam's Song

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All Rights Reserved. Copyright ©
2003 Mathabane Books & Lectures
This site was last edited on
February 22, 2008 10:54 AM
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Books
Kaffir Boy
Kaffir
Boy Page
Back Cover
Preface
Chapter One
KB in America
KB
in A Page
Back Cover
Chapter One
Love in B&W
Love
in B&W
Dust Jacket
Reader Reviews
Preface
Mark's View
Gail's View
African
Women
AW
Home
Back Cover
Reader Reviews
Preface
Chapter One
Ubuntu (Novel)
Ubuntu Page
Dust Jacket
Chapter One
Miriam's Song
Miriam's
Page
Dust
Jacket
Dedication
Preface
First Chapter
Reader Reviews
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