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St. John says towards the end of her memoir ".and concluded my whole life was a lie. You feel as if you are there and can feel the night, hear the crickets chirping, the textures of the foods, and smell the grass. A good memoir takes you inside the place it was written and this memoir did exactly that - inside Rhodesia and inside the writer Lauren St. John as she does indeed, question everything she was brought up to believe in. As St.
She becomes a stronger, more fascinating individual as she matures and starts questioning life.
John does a wonderful job of allowing you to watch her grow.
The trouble with having your eyes forcibly opened is that there is no way of closing them again.
John.Rainbow's End has you experiencing the sights, the smells, the sounds that are Rhodesia.
I'd been brainwashed politically and blind in almost every other way, and I had to reprocess everything from that position.
From a sheltered young girl living at Rainbow's End to a woman as Rhodesia undergoes a transformation to Zimbabwe.Lauren is a product of her culture and her upbringing and she unflinchingly acknowledges her prejudices.
You see her leave the innocence of childhood behind and watch her deal with the reality that is her life and her adulthood.
I felt like I had been snapped from a happy dream, from a beautiful illusion." The last quarter of the book at times is a painful journey for St.
The journey for the reader is a powerful one.
Lauren St John is a very talented writer. Her words flow off the page to evoke a very realistic and authentic account of living on a Rhodesian farm during the bush-war years. If you were there then, you will laugh and cry at memories like the snowy black and white TV reception and party line phones; serving in the troopie canteens and hearing the panic in voices over the Agric Alert.I can highly recommend this book. It is a very personal journey which I am very grateful that the writer was generous enough to share.
I've enjoyed this book especially because the frame for Lauren St. John's story--the Rhodesian Bush War and the transformation of Rhodesia into Zimbabwe--is a well-developed historical account, beautifully integrated into her childhood memoir. We understand the national upheaval as she did, first in a vague outline as her family conflicts are suggested in her adventures as a younger child, then from the white farmers' perspective as the war rages and her family relationships become more strained, and eventually from her shockingly altered perspective as she confronts her new understanding of both her family and her country. Despite her crushing disillusionment, this is ultimately a book of hope--and when you look at the list of her published books, you realize that she did achieve at least one of her childhood ambitions.
This was a wonderful book with superb descriptions of a world now destroyed. I lived for several years in South Africa, and when I read this book, I was transported back in time to the place I was happiest.
Flawless - in every sense - absolutely incredible breadth of space - the view you get through your own eyes is truly very real and utterly horrific. I grew up like this and I know what it takes to come out of it whole (or at least partly) - as you will never forget how and why we become the soil that makes us true ZIMBABWEANS.Thank you Alexandra - you are a legend.
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