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Dreams in a Time of War: A Childhood Memoir…
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Dreams in a Time of War: A Childhood Memoir (original 2010; edition 2010)

by Ngugi wa'Thiong'o (Author)

Series: Autobiography (1)

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332678,915 (3.85)80
Recounts the story of the author's childhood, covering his early years in World War II-era Kenya as the fifth child of a third wife, his thirst for learning that singled him out, and the political struggles that shaped his life.
Member:gachagua
Title:Dreams in a Time of War: A Childhood Memoir
Authors:Ngugi wa'Thiong'o (Author)
Info:Pantheon (2010), Edition: First American Edition, 272 pages
Collections:Your library
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Tags:to-read

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Dreams in a Time of War: A Childhood Memoir by Ngugi wa'Thiong'o (2010)

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English (5)  Italian (1)  All languages (6)
Showing 5 of 5
First-hand engrossing memoir of life during the years of the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya, and the often brutal British colonial responses. ( )
  sfj2 | Dec 3, 2023 |
I thoroughly enjoyed this memoir of Ngūgī wa Thiong'o. His writing and storytelling abilities were quite good. ( )
  b22johansen | May 4, 2015 |
Enjoyable and informative, definitely worth reading if you are curious to know more about the Mau Mau Rebellion 1952-1960 which lead to Kenyan Independence from Britain in 1963. Laid before you are the author's childhood memories up to his acceptance and arrival at high school. He is today a famed, contemporary African writer. This book focuses upon his quest for education, something all too many of us take for granted. It is about native Kenyan life. He was born in 1938, the fifth child of his father's third wife. Twenty-four siblings, four mothers, what is it like to be one in a polygamous family? You learn about life as one of the Kikuyu ethnic group in colonial Africa. Their land was taken from them, not once, but four times. Their culture was denied. There is a lot of history here, and it is not always told linearly. Furthermore the names are difficult, more so if you are listening to it as an audiobook. The narration by Hakeem Kai-Kazim is at times difficult to follow, particularly when the trial of Jomo Kenyatta is related with an angry tone, in an effort to emphasize the injustice of the events. I had to look on Wiki (Mau Mau Upprising and Jomo Kenyatta) to fully understand the scattered events splayed before me. It helped to see the names, to tie up the different threads. The book gives more depth than just reading at Wiki. What was his life like? How was it to have one brother as a Mau Mau rebel and another supporting the colonials? And what is it like to fight for the right to an education, to achieve that when you have no food, no shoes, no books and sometimes no light at all to work by. He succeeded. He didn't just succeed, he succeeded magnificently. His mother always asked him, "Is that your best?"

The prime message of this book is clear. Look at the title. In times of "war", we must have dreams to survive.

Completed July 17, 2013 ( )
2 vote chrissie3 | Jul 15, 2013 |
Because Ngũgĩ is such a brilliant writer, this memoir of his childhood is so much more than the tale of a boy moving from an almost traditional village to the best high school, a boarding school, in Kenya. It is a portrait of a world that clings to some of the customs in the past while being changed both by colonialism and by modernity, an introduction to the history and culture of the Gikuyu and an indictment of British exploitation and oppression, a demonstration of the power and beauty of storytelling and oral history, a loving tribute to family, and a testament to courage and determination and the power, for the modern era, of education.
6 vote rebeccanyc | Apr 9, 2010 |
Roman, Leseexemplar ( )
  BerndM | Sep 15, 2014 |
Showing 5 of 5
But for all these references to the mounting chaos, Ngugi's memoir is not about the world adults had made. "Dreams in a Time of War" hews to the promise the boy made his mother. Young Ngugi carries on his studies, despite all possible adversity. He marches off to school, takes joy in his ability to read, memorizes poetry, sits at the front of every classroom. The picture of Kenya that he presents, in other words, is admirably free of cant or sentimentality, and yet it is enough to make you weep. Here is a child, against the backdrop of a terrible war -- traveling a bloodied land with pen and paper -- thinking a dream can forge a better world.
added by kidzdoc | editWashington Post, Marie Arana (Mar 10, 2010)
 

» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Ngugi wa'Thiong'…primary authorall editionscalculated
Brückner, ThomasTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Caball, JosefinaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
There is nothing like a dream to create the future.
--Victor Hugo, Les Miserables
I have learnt
from books dear friend
of men dreaming and living
and hungering in a room without a light
who could not die since death was far too poor
who did not sleep to dream, but dreamed to change the world.
--Martin Carter, "Looking at Your Hands"
In the dark times
Will there also be singing?
Yes, there will be singing
About the dark times.
--Bertolt Brecht, "Motto"
Dedication
For Thiong'o senior, Kimunya, Nducu, Mukoma, Wanjiku, Njoki, Bjorn, Mumbi, Thiong'o K, and niece Ngina in the hope that you children will read this and get to know their great-grandmother Wanjiku and great-uncle Wallace Mwangi, a.k.a. Good Wallace, and the role they played in shaping our dreams.
First words
Years later when I read T.S. Eliot's line that April was the cruelest month, I would recall what happened to me on April day in 1954, in chilly Limuru, the prime estate of what, in 1902, another Eliot, Sir Charles Eliot, then governor of colonial Kenya, had set aside as White Highlands.
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Recounts the story of the author's childhood, covering his early years in World War II-era Kenya as the fifth child of a third wife, his thirst for learning that singled him out, and the political struggles that shaped his life.

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