You might expect a political novel if you knew the situation, but
before you do Bessie Head has the rug out - Sello the monk is
shimmering in the chair by the bed, and a three-year nightmare
brush with ultimate Powers is underway. Politics has primed the
heroine, Elizabeth, for a schizophrenic episode: she was raised as
a South African "coloured" under the worst possible conditions
(insane mother, grim orphanages); left stateless on the breakup of
an idealistic marriage (her rebel turned out to be a sexual
degenerate) and she has relocated to a native village where she can
only see herself as a mutant because of her Western blood and
education. Her survival powers, obviously since she's come this
far, are immense, but they are mightily and oddly strained and give
a strange thrust to the telling. Her phantasms - Sello and later
Dan, God and the Devil respectively - are introduced literally
along with the literal, relatively incidental persons; and their
torments (mostly enforced voyeurism, but also pain and insomnia)
dominate, but don't exclude her daily productive dealings in a
Peace-Corps-type garden project. There is no narrative conflict,
for all the emotional strain, and her feverishly lucid recital also
manages to involve high points of Oriental and Western religious
traditions along with her own line of cosmic conjecture, one point
of which is that she may be King David's reincarnation. (And she's
quite astute about white psychiatry, even while maintaining that
occult persecution drove her mad.) Since everything points to
autobiography, the clinical interest is enormous, but unless you
are clinically minded or drifting out yourself this may prove hard
to appreciate. (Kirkus Reviews)
"Head brilliantly develops ascending degrees of personal isolation,
and is very moving when she describes abating pain." - The Sunday
Times
It is never clear to Elizabeth whether the mission school
principal's cruel revelation of her origins is at the bottom of her
mental breakdown. She has left South Africa with her son and is
living in the village of Motabeng, the place of sand, in Botswana
where there are no street lights at night.
General
Imprint: |
Heinemann
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
African Writers S. |
Release date: |
July 1986 |
First published: |
May 2009 |
Authors: |
Bessie Head
|
Dimensions: |
198 x 128 x 13mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - B-format
|
Pages: |
206 |
Edition: |
Revised Ed. |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-435-90720-4 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General & literary fiction >
Modern fiction
|
LSN: |
0-435-90720-4 |
Barcode: |
9780435907204 |
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