Great African Reads discussion

This topic is about
The Rape of Sita
Tour d'Afrique M-Z Books 2012-16
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Collen: Rape of Sita & Appanah: The Last Brother | Mauritius (Tour D'Afrique) first read: Sept 2013
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Other (brief) thoughts:
-Raj's interest in Christianity was probably meant to serve as a contrast to David's Judaism, but since it never came up again it felt a bit forced.
-Nice detail on the names -- David the king and Raj meaning king.
-The prison -- how interesting. I wish we'd had a bit more about it (and, more to the point, what the Jewish prisoners were subject to), although I suppose that's a sacrifice made for the sake of Raj being so young for the events of the story (and for the sake of the language difference).

Oh, Beverly, i just saw your link.

I am still at the beginning of the book but hope to finish this week and then will be able to comment.

I read The Last Brother a few months ago and enjoyed it. I own The Rape Of Sita, but can't seem to find it. Hopefully, it will turn up soon.

I enjoyed the fact that the book didn't focus much on dialogue but that the plot and relationships were mainly expressed by actions - the abuse Raj's father inflicted, the caring tenderness his mother took to make him well and hiding David without so much a word being spoken between them, and the play between Raj and David even tho they did not speak the same language.

I enjoyed the fact that the book didn't focus much on dialogue but that the plot and relationships were mainly expressed by actions - the abus..."
I have to agree with your thoughts. I did finish the book while away on a trip but have not had time to write up my thoughts. (I am suppose to be playing catchup this weekend so may have more to say).
Books mentioned in this topic
The Last Brother (other topics)The Rape of Sita (other topics)
The Rape of Sita (other topics)
The Last Brother (other topics)
Africa's Embrace (other topics)
Again, deep apologies...my excuse involves work-work: terrible deadline I had to meet September 30, then this government shutdown here in the US. But I'm pulling myself together and for the unforseeable future, since we have no idea how long this shutdown will last, I will have hte time and space to get back into the swing of things here.
I'm curious: who has books for this stop? I managed to snag The Rape of Sita and the Durrell book (i like natural history stuff) but wasn't able to get The Last Brother (yet). I'm looking forward to this stop!