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A few years ago, after twenty years out of high school, I made a point to start rereading all of the classics assigned to me in school. It has been an arduous yet uplifting task as I have experienced these classic books again through an adult mind. In this the third year that I am participating in classics bingo, I took the opportunity to revisit another high school book for the classic of the 20th century square. Alan Paton's Cry, the Beloved Country seventy years later is still considered the
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Aug 15, 2015
Book Concierge
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Audiobook narrated by Frederick Davidson.
And old man, a Zulu pastor in a small impoverished South African town, has lost three dear relatives to the big city. His brother, John, has gone to Johannesburg and opened a business. He no longer writes. His much younger sister, Gertrude, took her son to Johannesburg to look for her husband who had gone previously to find work; the husband never wrote, and Gertrude has not written. And finally his son, Absalom, went to Johannesburg to look for his aunt, ...more
And old man, a Zulu pastor in a small impoverished South African town, has lost three dear relatives to the big city. His brother, John, has gone to Johannesburg and opened a business. He no longer writes. His much younger sister, Gertrude, took her son to Johannesburg to look for her husband who had gone previously to find work; the husband never wrote, and Gertrude has not written. And finally his son, Absalom, went to Johannesburg to look for his aunt, ...more

Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton is the deeply moving story of the Zulu pastor Stephen Kumalo and his son, Absalom, set against the background of a land and a people riven by racial injustice.
I read this book for two reasons:
1) I am participating in a group that plans to read at least one book from every country in the world. I had read this book set in South Africa in 1946 once before and wanted to read it again.
2) I was born in 1948 and that is when Apartheid started in South Africa.
Apa ...more
I read this book for two reasons:
1) I am participating in a group that plans to read at least one book from every country in the world. I had read this book set in South Africa in 1946 once before and wanted to read it again.
2) I was born in 1948 and that is when Apartheid started in South Africa.
Apa ...more

Oct 23, 2010
Kelly
marked it as to-read


Jun 06, 2017
Nancy
marked it as to-read