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Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood

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ISBN: 0375758992 - Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood  
Title:Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight: An African Childhood
Author:Alexandra Fuller
Publisher:Random House Trade Paperbacks
Type:Book / Paperback
Publication Date:11 March, 2003
ISBN / ISBN-13:0375758992  /  9780375758997
List Price:$14.95
You Save:$4.78
Amazon Price:$10.17

* This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $3.14.



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Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:

Product Description
In Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, Alexandra Fuller remembers her African childhood with candor and sensitivity. Though it is a diary of an unruly life in an often inhospitable place, it is suffused with Fuller’s endearing ability to find laughter, even when there is little to celebrate. Fuller’s debut is unsentimental and unflinching but always captivating. In wry and sometimes hilarious prose, she stares down disaster and looks back with rage and love at the life of an extraordinary family in an extraordinary time.

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Customer Reviews:

 • A Surprisingly Great Read!
31 March, 2008

I found this in audio at an audio rental store. The front intrigued me so I read the back and decided to give it a go. I liked it so much that my husband decided he wanted to listen to it too! What an interesting life to have lead at such a young age!

- Reviewed by customer ID: A2O8OBKQ7G33NO

 • Highly Recommended
05 January, 2008

This is not a book is fascinating, though not the best pick for those with a weak stomach. It's painfully honest and that's why I loved it. The author has a really rich yet simple way of writing, so you feel, smell, see, taste the entire experience they had growing up in Africa. It's far from a comfortable way of life, and it's downright depressing in some parts, but that's part of its honesty and richness. I really respect someone who is able to write about their own life without glamorizing it nor condemning it.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A3EPPHZMXK5LOC

 • This Woman Is Fascinated With Toilet Functions!!!!
02 February, 2008

Okay, now as a former and recovering English major I'm going to admit that Ms. Fuller is actually a decent writer, But I do want to point out a few things the other reviews don't cover. First, Ms. Fuller is stridently politically correct and distorts the historical facts of the former Rhodesia in an effort to demonize the whites. The distortion does border on reverse racism, however much I hate to trot out the r-word. Secondly, this woman is absolutely obsessed with toilet functions and other bodily things and takes any opportunity to describe them--particularly her own. She takes an almost narciscisstic delight in describing herself in these terms.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AQQYWK0HINFCN

 • The Roads Of Rhodesia
03 March, 2008

This family is composed mainly of fighters, people who decided to forsake the clotted cream comfort of their native England for the thorny bush country of, what was then known as, Rhodesia. In poetic prose that the reader occasionally stumbles over, Fuller takes us on a dense tour of her life in Africa, thesaurus in hand, and describes the stunning beauty and hopeless squalor of the land with a series of adjectives and adverbs that occasionally seem shoehorned in but rarely off-the-mark. This makes for an occasionally jarring, though still beautiful, journey, much like what the young author must have experienced perched on the spare tire of her family's bucking Land Rover. Some of Fuller's descriptive metaphors, however, are quite luminous; they stay with you. Still, she hits home with her prose more often than not, and produces a thoroughly readable if somewhat detached report on the life of her family, and how they bear up as trauma eclipses joy after a series of dismal events, including the deaths of small children and runs for the border of several African nations as things (i.e., the political landscape, war) shift and change. These things would loom large in anyone's life, and they are told here with an air of inevitability and acceptance . . . even excitement. Here's a family who thrives on adventure. There were several times Fuller had me right there in the back of the Land Rover with her. I was unsettled and awed by what we saw together. She's an amazing writer when she gets going. Great read.

- Reviewed by customer ID: AXB7O6621G5DP

 • A-recollection-but-not-really-a-revealing-one
02 January, 2008

Fuller writes an honest (the book's greatest strength) but skeletal (the book's greatest weakness) account of her childhood in south/eastern Africa. Fuller's parents were of, perhaps, the last generation of white expatriates who hoped to govern in Africa. Her mother's wish: that one country in Africa remain white-run. Although Fuller, by race, is of this European superclass, her family is not wealthy. So they struggle and they relocate. Her upbringing emboldens her to think her white self superior to the black native muntu.(She admits to this "Anglocentricity" in the best written part of the book, the afterword: "My Africa".) {{And now a personal recollection. Fuller and I were in Malawi at the same time: she, a member of that expatriate white community trying to forge a life in Africa; me, a member--"two-year wonders", Fuller calls them--of the aid community trying to help in Africa. The groups did not mix well. When I asked the white manager of a tea estate how long it would take before Malawians would be able manage the farm, he said: "These boogers are only one bound out of the jungle". Racist, yes; truthful,. . .? He, though, was willing to stay and work and live in Malawi evermore. I taught my three years at a secondary school, bolted, and kissed ground when I landed back in the U.S. Who deserves criticism? Who helps more?}} The most moving part of the book: when Fuller visits the hut of a native family and then returns--as a gesture of thanks for their hospitality to her--to offer second-hand clothes to them. That recollection reveals the humanity of the family she visits and the humility and compassion Fuller started to feel as she matured. That is the type of writing--unfortunately only found in this passage and in her afterword--which would have made this book great.

- Reviewed by customer ID: A25TJD77EBERPD


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