218th out of 349 books
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431 voters
Out Of Africa
In 1921, the year that Baroness Karen Blixen found herself stranded by her divorce on a Kenyan mountain farm, most women in her circumstances would have fled back to civilization.
But instead of returning to her native Denmark, the 35-year-old Blixen stayed on and ran the farm.
In 1931 coffee prices collapsed and she was forced to leave. She returned to Denmark where she pou
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Published
(first published 1937)
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Feb 21, 2010
Ken-ichi
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommended to Ken-ichi by:
Elizabeth
This is a book that I enjoyed without loving, but it nevertheless provided some novel experiences and food for thought, and what more can we ask of our books? I mean, besides spaceships and explosions. Dinesen's writing (and Dinesen herself) seems alternately lyrical and pragmatic, equally direct in describing grisly accidents with firearms or the otherwordly sensation of flying, but the whole was too fragmented and impressionistic to ever really dig its claws into me.
That said, it did get me th...more
That said, it did get me th...more
I chose to read this book in high school as one of those free-reading things for which you later have to give a presentation. This is a book about Africa for white people who want to go on a safari and see the cool animals, which is basically what the author did. I kinda hated Karen Blixen for her condescending attitude towards the "natives" and I felt the whole book was nothing but pretentious, self-aggrandizing bullshit. If I had had any courage, I would have done two things differently for my...more
Jun 07, 2012
Ebookwormy
rated it
3 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
carp-500,
world-africa
This book captures the charm, the majesty, the beauty of Africa and her native people. A beautiful read full of stories about the tensions arising from the colonization of Kenya, and it's benefits (things like better medical care).
However, as far as biography, I found the book rather shadowy. There is reference to a husband, but no discussion of him. Reference to sickness but no clarity as to what caused it. References to male friends, but no insight into their relationship with the author. To f...more
However, as far as biography, I found the book rather shadowy. There is reference to a husband, but no discussion of him. Reference to sickness but no clarity as to what caused it. References to male friends, but no insight into their relationship with the author. To f...more
Dec 22, 2007
Christie VanLaningham
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
reality
This has been on my "must read" list forever. When I picked it up, I'm embarrassed to say, I wasn't immediately aware that it was a memoir. I knew about the movie, and just assumed it was a novel based on Dinesen's experiences. So - it felt a little slow in the beginning, as I got my bearings. But Africa quickly seduced me, and I found myself fighting a low-grade fury that the Africa of her day was lost forever. How often does this irritation rattle me? All these places and times and I won't eve...more
Ok, I'll admit it. I really didn't love this book. I didn't even finish it. I am adding it as read because I read more than half of it and I should get something out of it since I won't be getting my time wasted back. I'm sure you are supposed to read this for the lovely descriptions of Africa (and it does sound quite lovely) but if I had to read another comparison of a native to an animal I thought I was going to scream. There was zero story line. It was just not something that I could apprecia...more
When I first got hold of the book, I thought it was a novel, which is the basis of the Oscar Award winning movie of the same title starring Meryl Streep and Robert Redford. But the book is actually a memoir written by a Danish baroness (real name: Karen von Blixen) who took over the management of a coffee plantation on her own in Kenya after she and her unfaithful husband divorced. It’s a vivid snapshot of her life in Africa, or rather a lyrical expression of her love to the wonderful people and...more
May 16, 2009
Tinea
rated it
1 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
no one! why are we still pretending this colonial drivel has value?
Recommended to Tinea by:
Mom
Shelves:
colonialism-imperialism-war,
place
I have no idea why my mom recommended this book to me. A white British colonist tells the story of her privileged life on her coffee plantation in Kenya. She writes some great imagery about the Kenyan landscape and tells funny stories about animals, except that her idea of the landscape and animals includes all the Black servants and workers and "squatters" on her plantation. She is really stupid and proudly naive. It's awful. For example, when she jokingly threatens to fire all of her servants...more
a memoir written about her experiences in Kenya Africa before and just shortly after WWI. She owns a large coffee plantation by herself. There is a husband mentioned briefly but he is gone, but she never elaborates. The book covers the same time period as The Flame Tree of Thicka, which I really liked. Dinesen’s story takes place somewhat north of Nairobi and the Thicka is somewhat south. In about the same area. I wondered often if the two families ever knew each other. Dinesen tells the every d...more
Out of Africa is Karen Blixen's memoir about her years in Africa, writing as Isak Dinesen. She recounts the world of Africa, specifically Kenya. It is, like the England of her friend Denys Finch-Hatton, "a world that no longer existed" even then and certainly as she left it. The memoir is a slow read, yet a book with prose in which you can luxuriate, or languish perhaps as it seems to mirror the mammoth African landscape. Reading like a pastoral novel, the narrator interested me with her myriad...more
Jun 21, 2007
Astrid
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
everyone
Shelves:
non-fiction
I first chose this book because the english section in the french bookshop was very limited. However only after a few pages "Out of Africa" really made me stay in my chair, very unwilling to put it down. It is beautifully written and gives such an insight into the colonial life in Kenya in the early 20th century.
Karen Blixen writes about her life on the farm, the daily running of it, her on-farm workers and her place in it all. As her husband was very rarely there, it was K. Blixen that took car...more
Karen Blixen writes about her life on the farm, the daily running of it, her on-farm workers and her place in it all. As her husband was very rarely there, it was K. Blixen that took car...more
I first ran across Karen Blixen's name in the Janet Flanner/ Solita Solano files in the Library of Congress unpublished manuscripts division. She was a compatriot of theirs in the twenties in Paris. This is the only book of hers that I have read. I enjoyed her descriptions of the wildlife and natural surroundings of Kenya, but I always felt that something was missing from this book. Maybe it was her husband. Maybe it was a feeling I had that she did not tell the whole story about why she had to...more
I have mixed feelings about this book and others written by colonial settlers in Africa. I find it impossible to separate how this author came to possess the magnificent slice of Kenya that she did from her writings about it. At the heart of her story and others like it is the savage and devastating legacy of colonialism. How many lives and ways of life were obliterated to provide her with her beloved coffee farm? Though she may have respected the land and the people native to it, that does not...more
There's a reason why people keep reading this book decade after decade. It's a masterpiece, a memoir about life on a farm in Africa that is filled with such humanity, generosity, love, and nostalgia that it is impossible to resist. Dinesen does wonders at telling a rather simple story in ways that keep the reader captive. It's enchanting like a real, bittersweet, exotic, mysterious fairy-tale: with the author's words, her life on the African continent becomes an extraordinary adventure of almost...more
Author is a brave woman running a farm in East Africa during World War I. She is super smart but rather dry and especially in the first half of the book, impersonal. Even if one hasn't seen the Hollywood movie, you can't help but ask yourself "Where the hell is Robert Redford?" And in fact, even after his character appears in the novel, you're still not sure it's him, since Dinesen writes as if she is sexless. In this sense, the film does sort of kill the book, b/c without such expectations of s...more
B Isak Dinesen moved to Africa to farm with her husband, who she separated from, and lived alone on her farm with "the Natives" or "my squatters," having her lover visit her occasionally. It's a very interesting portrayal of a white European colonist living in Africa, with her unique experiences. At times, it bothers me a bit (the Europeans living in Africa at that time were racist), but her writing really is lovely and fascinating. Tidbit: I found out about this book from reading Catcher in the...more
“I had a farm in Africa, at the foot of the Ngong Hills.” Thus begins Karen Blixen’s magnificent memoir of her time in Africa*. I have a hard time reading things that aren't narratively driven and memoirs are particularly difficult for me to get through. However, the sheer lushness of Blixen’s prose and the novelty of her life made this an enchanting and engaging read. Throughout the memoir, Blixen’s observations and voice come across as something entirely unique – an expansive and expressive ye...more
I read this book for two reasons. Firstly, it satisfied my first love, which is to travel, and to live and experience another culture, life, place, and people. Secondly, I was about to embark on a trip to Kenya and Tanzania, and thought that it would be fitting to read what is considered such a seminole piece of literature about the area. In Nairobi, there is an entire neighbourhood dedicated in her honour, and she is something of a cult figure to many inhabitants.
The book naturally enthralled m...more
The book naturally enthralled m...more
She describes the Kenya I knew as a teenager and the Kenya I can still find today if only I'll be still long enough to let it come into my life. Sweeping vistas through magnificent writing. The movie is fantastic and the making of the movie even better. The soundtrack - one that plays in the background on many hard work days of mine.
Flying our microlight trikes over the national parks still feels like the scene in the movie which still touches me so much after dozens of times watching it. Readi...more
Flying our microlight trikes over the national parks still feels like the scene in the movie which still touches me so much after dozens of times watching it. Readi...more
Out of Africa is less a single story than a series of vignettes arranged thematically to form the whole. It is like a collage of beautiful images of life on Karen Blixen's coffee plantation. Clearly Blixen loved this land, its people, and its wildlife. She embraced the opportunities that her life there presented. She attended the tribal ceremonial dances. She brokered resolutions of of conflicts among her workers, using accepted tribal methods, but also with a written and signed contract. She hu...more
La testimonianza toccante ed emozionante di una donna e della totale comunione con la sua terra: ecco cos’è La mia Africa. Karen Blixen possiede una capacità evocativa che ha dello straordinario, ben poche volte ho visto raggiungere simili vette di lirismo: appassionante autobiografia e grande talento espressivo si danno la mano in questo libro per tracciare, episodio dopo episodio, la storia dei suoi vent’anni nell’amato altopiano Ngong con una vividezza impressionante.
I timidi kikuyu, che colt...more
I timidi kikuyu, che colt...more
Lo ammetto: forse l'ho iniziato con un po' troppe aspettative, ma ad essere sincera questo libro mi ha deluso.
Io ho un rapporto speciale con lAfrica, la amo da quando ci sono stata per la prima volta, e tutti i bei commenti riguardo a "La Mia Africa" mi avevano incuriosita, sperando di leggere qualcosa che rispecchiasse i miei sentimenti su questa meravigliosa terra, che mi facesse riprovare tutte le emozioni di quando c'ero stata in prima persona (molti mi avevano promesso questi effetti), e in...more
Io ho un rapporto speciale con lAfrica, la amo da quando ci sono stata per la prima volta, e tutti i bei commenti riguardo a "La Mia Africa" mi avevano incuriosita, sperando di leggere qualcosa che rispecchiasse i miei sentimenti su questa meravigliosa terra, che mi facesse riprovare tutte le emozioni di quando c'ero stata in prima persona (molti mi avevano promesso questi effetti), e in...more
I really enjoyed this book and can't think what took me so long to get around to reading it. This was a tale of one womans life living in British East Africa, now Kenya i loved the descriptions of the land and her love for Africa shone through.It was a well written book about her life in Africa and adventures, It was not really an autobiographical read as she made light of her struggle to keep the farm going ,her financial plight, and her husband was not mentioned, It was really sad at the end o...more
When H/P transferred my family from Singapore to France I took advantage of the opportunity to drop down on the continent between the two, for a long vacation and photo safari on Africa's horn. The utter blackness at night was amazing to this city girl. On the few nights we spent in tents, rather than lodges,there was so much noise – insect, bird and animal hoopla – that it was hard for me to sleep. The lion roars were particularly unnerving. At the same time I was glad to be awake because the c...more
A brilliantly episodic and descriptive narrative of Dinesen's years "at the foot of the Ngong Hills," as she so famously puts it. Here is a true lover of Africa in its state before colonialism ceased and political correctness hid many of its simple beauties or destroyed them altogether. Dinesen seems to have a sense that she is documenting a time that will soon be lost history, yet she still allows her whimsy and imagination to play. In fact, although one knows disreputable facts about this set...more
"Looking back on a sojourn in the African highlands, you are struck by your feeling of having lived for a time up in the air. The sky was rarely more than pale blue or violet, with a profusion of mighty, weightless, ever-changing clouds towering up and sailing on it, but it has a blue vigour in it, and at a short distance it painted the ranges of hills and the woods a fresh deep blue. In the middle of the day the air was alive over the land, like a flame burning' it scintillated, waved, and shon...more
Following Finch-Hatton's death and the bankruptcy of the coffee farm, Dinesen returned to Denmark and moved back into the estate where she was born, Rungstedlund. It was after she returned home and was living with her family that Dinesen began to write in earnest. She adopted the pen name, "Isak Dinesen," the term "Isak" being the Hebrew word for "one who laughs." She also decided that she should write in English, because it is a language that is more widely read than Danish. Her first collectio...more
I really enjoyed the book. There were parts that dragged a bit. There were also very small parts that she wrote in Latin, Danish, German, or something I didn't recognize...all of which I didn't understand and they weren't translated so that broke the story she was trying to tell up for me and detracted from what I got out of it. The descriptions of Africa and her farm made me want to move there and have a grand adventure of my own!!
I loved Lulu the deer(real name forget) and Kamante the servant....more
I loved Lulu the deer(real name forget) and Kamante the servant....more
Mar 02, 2010
Natalie
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
anyone who's just finished ring of bright water
It's been 25 years since I read out of africa the first time. What remains with me from this autobiographical account of isak Dinesen/Karen Blixen's life in Kenya from 1914-1931 and her romance with Denys Finch Hatton is not just the scale of the land and its influence on all around, which was huge - but the author's own resposne to the challenges of her household, farming, work, and repatriating back to Denmark. Those images of her will to influence and make the best of small things remain just...more
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
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HEADLINE: The film of the same name bears no relation to the book in any truly important respect.
The biggest piece of baggage many of us bring to this book is the film of the same title, admittedly a visually stunning one. However, consider as you read the book what Brenda Cooper of Utah State University points out in her thesis, a point that I happen to agree with adamantly based upon my own reading of this book:
The biggest piece of baggage many of us bring to this book is the film of the same title, admittedly a visually stunning one. However, consider as you read the book what Brenda Cooper of Utah State University points out in her thesis, a point that I happen to agree with adamantly based upon my own reading of this book:
Recent research indicates that questionable choices are made in order to fit women’...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bright Young Things: Out of Africa by Karen Blixen | 13 | 45 | Mar 21, 2013 07:06pm | |
| Boxall's 1001 Bo...: August {2012} Discussion -- OUT OF AFRICA by Isak Dinesen (Karen Blixen) | 18 | 104 | Sep 04, 2012 11:52am | |
| World Travel thro...: September 2012: Out of Africa | 2 | 5 | Aug 16, 2012 06:53am | |
| You'll love this ...: Out of Africa | 4 | 10 | Aug 14, 2012 02:43pm |
Karen Christence Dinesen, Baroness Blixen-Finecke - wrote as Isak Dinesen, Pierre Andrézel, Tania Blixen, Osceola, etc.
A Danish writer, who mixed in her work supernatural elements, aestheticism, and erotic undertones with an aristocratic view of life, Blixen always emphasized that she was a storyteller in the traditional, oral sense of the word. She drew her inspiration from the Bible, the Arabian...more
More about Isak Dinesen...
A Danish writer, who mixed in her work supernatural elements, aestheticism, and erotic undertones with an aristocratic view of life, Blixen always emphasized that she was a storyteller in the traditional, oral sense of the word. She drew her inspiration from the Bible, the Arabian...more
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“You know you are truly alive when you’re living among lions.”
—
78 people liked it
“People who dream when they sleep at night know of a special kind of happiness which the world of the day holds not, a placid ecstasy, and ease of heart, that are like honey on the tongue. They also know that the real glory of dreams lies in their atmosphere of unlimited freedom. It is not the freedom of the dictator, who enforces his own will on the world, but the freedom of the artist, who has no will, who is free of will. The pleasure of the true dreamer does not lie in the substance of the dream, but in this: that there things happen without any interference from his side, and altogether outside his control. Great landscapes create themselves, long splendid views, rich and delicate colours, roads, houses, which he has never seen or heard of...”
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