Tatamkhulu Afrika (1920–2002)
Autore di Bitter Eden
Sull'Autore
Opere di Tatamkhulu Afrika
Opere correlate
Another English: Anglophone Poems from Around the World (Poets in the World) (2014) — Collaboratore — 10 copie
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Altri nomi
- Carlton, John
Joubert, Jouza
Joubert, Ismail - Data di nascita
- 1920
- Data di morte
- 2002
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- South Africa
- Luogo di nascita
- Sallum, Egypt
- Luogo di morte
- Cape Town, South Africa
- Breve biografia
- The author published his first novel at 17 and this, his fourth novel, at 82. Born in 1920 to an Egyptian father and Turkish mother, he was orphaned at two and raised by a Methodist couple who renamed him John Carlton and forgot to mention he wasn't white. He changed his name first to Jouza Joubert, then to Ismail Joubert. He was a POW during WWII and much later served time in the same prison where and while Nelson Mandela was held. Banned for five years and forbidden to write, he used the name Tatamkhulu Afrika under which he won many prizes for his poetry and essays. Two weeks after publishing Bitter Eden he died of injuries from being struck by a car.
Utenti
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Statistiche
- Opere
- 6
- Opere correlate
- 2
- Utenti
- 115
- Popolarità
- #170,830
- Voto
- 4.2
- Recensioni
- 2
- ISBN
- 17
- Lingue
- 3
Bitter Eden is a story about the relationships between men who while they consider themselves straight, face the conflicting emotions that result from being closely confined under the most difficult conditions. When men build such close friendships, so close that they come to depend upon each other for day to day survival, for the closeness of shared body heat through freezing nights, it inevitably leads to confusions which can be betrayed by the bodies own natural responses. It is this confusion that is so convincingly portrayed that forms the backbone of the story.
The friendship that develops between Tom and Danny is fraught with problems, but it is based a deep bond of loyalty, and although not named, love. Tatamkhulu Afrika wrote Bitter Eden when eighty years old, his first novel, yet is has a freshness and originality, both in the nature of the story in the remarkable telling. It is a most compelling read, vividly depicting some of the horrors suffered by prisoners of World War II, rich in emotion, at times heart rending. It is a story that will leave the reader much to contemplate, not least the enigmatic conclusion.… (altro)