I read memoirs in between fiction works because in memoirs, there is a bigger chance that the events really happened. I perceive memoirs as nearer to truth and so lessons are more rational and factual.
I picked up this book because I felt that I did not know anything about Nelson Mandela except that he was a very popular prisoner and he became the President of South Africa. He fought against apartheid in South Africa and that was the reason why he got imprisoned for more than a quarter of one's life, i.e., 27 years.
Imagine spending those many years in prison? It is unthinkable for me. In the first company I worked with after college, I stayed for 12 years and I was only promoted once. After that company, I moved and moved and got promoted each time. Now, when I look back at my career progression, I thought that I wasted so many years in that first company. But Mandela? He even considers those 27 years in prison to be the most meaningful years of his life!
Conversations with Myself is not really the usual memoir where the narrative flows from birth to old age. It contains snippets of Mandela's life: entries from his diaries, letters, conversation excerpts, etc. The later came from recordings done by Richard Stengel who worked with Nelson Mandela's autobiography Long Walk to Freedom. The snippets were picked judiciously to give the reader not only what transpired during Mandela's 27 years in Robben Island but more importantly, what when inside his head. For example, the question on sexual release was answered by him in one of his letters to Winnie Mandela in 1962. During his stay in prison he read many books including books about similar "rebels" like him. These books include one about Luis Taruc, a HUKBALAHAP leader here in the Philippines during the 50's.
Don't get the impression that the book, being a collection of snippets about the man, does not have the full picture about the man and a unified feel. Reading it is like reading one person's diary and seeing a collage of his photos or having a peek at his personal photo album. For a person as popular as Mandela, since you have heard something about him on newspapers and magazines, saw his images on television or heard your Leadership trainer talks about him in school, you already know an overview of his life. Now when you get to this book, you get to know the more intimate or personal level of the man.
After reading this book, Mandela joins my personal roster of hero figures. He proves to me that we should not discount ourselves as just a speck in the universe. Each of us can, as long as we have the will power, do something (even how little) to change this world.