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Cry, the Beloved Country (Oprah's Book Club)

Cry, the Beloved Country (Oprah's Book Club)

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: With all the touching of Humanity
Review: My own grandfather was very close to Alan Paton. They worked together, in South Africa, on the developments of a Liberal Party, the purpose of which was to help the blacks. They wanted, primarily, to create legally equality of the races. Eventually, Paton would come to North America, touring and lecturing. My grandparents showed him Toronto. And so, I myself have a special bias in favour of Paton.

Having read his CRY, THE BELOVED COUNTRY, I can only applaud the man. His very style is mimical of Steibeck's THE GRAPES OF WRATH. There is repitition (individual sentences are said over and over), poetry, and the asking of philosophical questions.

The story is of Stephen Kumalo, a black priest. He has lost his family. His brother, sister, and son have left the village. They have gone to Johannesburg, where the white men are. Where industry is. And so the journey begins. In fact, Kumalo will see things he has never seen before. He will be robbed, he will be lied to, he will be tired of walking so many miles, he will see prostitution, crime, hatred. The simplicity of his beautiful village is not found here in Johannesburg. Incidentally, he finds some white men who show compassion to him. I will say no more.

The story has depth of passion, brilliance, and love of South Africa. Paton, himself a white man, devoted his life to the helping of blacks. He was a hero to South Africa, and remains a hero even to me.

Please read this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Something Beautiful for God
Review: If there were more stars with which I could rate this book, I would use them all. I have read this book many times, and would like to share my thoughts on one of the most beautiful books in the history of literature and in the English language. It is a story about friendship, humanity, being hurt and being free; it is a story about kindness, forgiveness, sacrifice and perserverence. But most of all, it is a story about a love so amazing that it must die so that the seed which falls can grow again. Although the evil of Apartheid has been finally abolished by justice and righteousness, the lesson that it has taught us must never be forgotten. And Paton's unique diamond of a masterpiece will continue to speak resoundingly to the future about a painful history of mankind that spelt deep tragedy but great poetry and human triumph as well. I cannot begin to extol the beauty of this novel - so profoundly rich in Christian virtues, so poignantly told. If you wish to hear the African grass sing its morning song, to hear a land of blood and tears beat her heart, and to marvel at the integrity which is man - read this wonderful book. It will change your life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Capturing the essence of South Africa as few authors have...
Review: With Cry, The Beloved Country Alan Paton creates a world were hate is predominant and respect is required of all native African citizens for their white "superiors." Paton creates a novel that plays out so true to life, so full of compassion for its characters, and so full of heart-ache is can bring one to tears.

The novel focuses on its protaganist, an aging African minister named Stephen Kumalo, who is on a quest to find his son Absalom in the big city (the largest in Africa at the time I belive) Johannesburg. Here he searches all over, but only in vain, for the places where his son has resided, but his son has already departed from them. But its in Johannesburg where Reverend Kumalo discovers his sister and her son, his brother (a carpenter come political activist), and other characters that range from a fellow pastor to the father of a son who has been murdered.

Cry, the Beloved Country, reads like many ancient texts oddly enough, and some readers may find it difficult to keep up with because Paton uses no quotation marks to signify dialogue, but nonetheless Cry, the Beloved Country is a captivating novel that reaches into one's soul and explains the boundaries of compassion, and the meaning of friendship even in the most trying of times.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great
Review: This is a really good book. Anyone will like it. It is a tragic story of a black man who tries to reunite his faimly in South Africa. When I finished it I was crying, it was so sad. This is a great book, and you need to read it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Unique story of the troubles of an African family
Review: This is an excellent story of the problems an African priest has keeping his family together, the misshaps of a White family, and the results when they meet in the final chapter. Steven Kumalo goes on a hard adventure for his old body to recover his daughter, his legally troubled son, and his power ridden brother. This story is very cleverly weaved in with the story of a White family going through the loss of a son and troubles with their farm. Together they meet and have interesting results. The start of the story is bleek with racial troubles but the latter part of the book shows new hope in our younger generations to come. This is a good book recommended to everyone.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Heartbreaking
Review: A very moving story of two neighboring families set amidst the racially/politically turbulent atmosphere of Mid-20th Century South Africa. Beautifully written, with exquisite description of South Africa's landscape. Universal, timeless message of human hope & fear, oppression & equality, and understanding & reconciliation. A must read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The troubled life of a black S. African man during Aparthied
Review: There is a lovely road that runs from Ixopo into the hills. So starts this book, a portrayel of one South African man's struggle to reunite his family. Kumalo is a black man who lives in South Africa in the 1940's admist Aparthied. His goal is to bring back his sister and son back to him. Alan Paton does an excellent job showing the obvious difference between a life of a black and white. Skin color was everything at that time. He displays the awful townships that blacks must live in because they have no other place to go. He also shows how mistreatment of blacks was a daily routine. As only a seventh grade student, I have to admit that at times I was sometimes confused while reading. However, the true meaning of this book was obvious. South Africa has gone through a tragic life. This book gives such an in depth gripping example of a black man's life that it is hard not to believe that it isn't an autobiography. This book displays the racial injustice of the law, by showing the sentence against Absalom. It's a true-eyeopener of the cruel history of our world, and what we have done to it. This wonderful book is one that should be read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Review for Cry the Beloved Country
Review: Cry the beloved Country, By Alan Paton, is a beautifullly written story of the conflict in South Africa in the 20th century. Its the story of a Zulu priest named Stephen Kumalo, who leaves his village to go and return his sister from the city. Yet, when he gets there, nothing is the way that he imagined it. The story is completely descriptive, and told so that you completely emphathize with Kumalo, and the problems that he is going through. You see his anguish at the fates of his son and his sister, the sadness and growing awareness that his country is being torn apart, and the knowledge that he is almost powerless against it. You see it from the other side as well, the side of James Jarvis, the father of the man that Kumalo's son murdered. You see him comes to terms with his sons death, and his changing views on the plight of his country. YOu watch his help Kumalo. In all, although slightly saddening, the story is moving and beautiful, and totally worth reading. If not for the value of the story alone, but for everything that it pertains to. Cry the Beloved country is wonderful.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Light Shed on the Horrors of South African Apartheid
Review: Alan Paton has made a great historical contribution to the people of South Africa. In this gripping novel, Paton exposes the cruelty and injustice taking place in post-war South Africa. He does a superb job of describing the wretched townships of Johannesburg, in which thousands of blacks were confined and forced to live. Also illustrated in the book are a corrupt court system, completely dominated by whites. This book gave me a real understanding of the brutal racism and hatred that was so present at the time of this books first publication, and exists even today. Yet amidst all of the bigotry, the reader is left with the impression that the people of South Africa will inevitably come to accept and respect one another regardless of the color of their skin.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Profoundly Emotional, Beautifully Written
Review: For me, this book had a slow start as I tried to get into the rhythm of the writing and grasp where the story was going. I was reading it for my book club, and for the first 50 pages or so, wasn't too happy about it. BUT THEN, something shifted and I was completely immersed in it. I must admit (sadly) to not knowing a lot about the history of South Africa, so I'm sure I didn't appreciate that aspect of the story as much as I could have. I will now learn more and reread the book so that I can experience that side of it fully. But, the story of what the father, Stephen Kumalo, experienced moved me to tears on several occasions. Reading from a parent's perspective, I could emotionally and physically feel what that man must have been experiencing- Paton's writing is amazing. This book is so sad and sweet and touching. There is much to say about all of the other aspects and story lines of this novel- all good. I was so tempted to stop reading at the beginning, and if I hadn't been reading it for the book club discussion, I believe I would have. I am so thankful that I didn't quit- I would have missed out on one of the most beautiful, rich, heart-rending, inspiring, and wonderful books I have ever read. I recommend it completely.


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