Specify Appertaining To Books Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass
Title | : | Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass |
Author | : | Isak Dinesen |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 462 pages |
Published | : | October 23rd 1989 by Vintage (first published 1937) |
Categories | : | Nonfiction. Cultural. Africa. Autobiography. Memoir. Classics. Biography. Travel. History |
Isak Dinesen
Paperback | Pages: 462 pages Rating: 4.24 | 10196 Users | 406 Reviews
Representaion Toward Books Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass
Out of Africa tells the story of a farm that the narrator once had in Africa. The farm is located at the foot of the Ngong hills outside of Nairobi, in what is now Kenya. It sits at an altitude of six thousand feet. The farm grows coffee, although only part of its six thousand acres is used for agriculture. The remaining parts of the land are forest and space for the natives to live on.Itemize Books In Pursuance Of Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass
Original Title: | Out of Africa ~ Shadows on the Grass |
ISBN: | 0679724753 (ISBN13: 9780679724759) |
Edition Language: | English |
Rating Appertaining To Books Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass
Ratings: 4.24 From 10196 Users | 406 ReviewsWrite-Up Appertaining To Books Out of Africa / Shadows on the Grass
This book, while firmly entrenched in a racist colonialist system, is amazing. The writing is gorgeous - vivid, poetic, and unforgettable language that leaves your mind filled with images and landscapes that you'll never experience in real life. I thought this book was wonderful - an impressive account of a woman who was way before her time, very independent. Also an interesting slice of history. It's a fascinating read.What a masterpiece. Out of Africa uses poetry for what is essentially a memoir, tells gently of human tragedies large and small, and records a lovely time that seems even to the author to be magical and impossible, yet it is nonfiction.Isak Dinesen wrote in her second language - English, just as Josseph Conrad did. She used an assumed name, and even in life in her vanity she went by "Baroness Blixen," even though her marriage to the holder of that name was broken and his own claim to the title
I had seen the movie adaptation of this book and loved it for the landscape. It's a poor advertisement for the book. The landscape is still there, but the story is almost completely different. While the movie is very overtly a love story between a man and a woman (and a pretty good one) the book is a love story between a woman and a continent. The man who is her lover in the movie appears in the book, but she never explicitly states that he is her lover, and she certainly never discusses the
The things I learned from reading this book: a spelling on how to say hello (male and female) in Maa (Kimaasai, Maasai language) and also putting to words the feeling I had seeing the beauty of the Maasai women with their shaved heads. As Blixen put it it was so overwhelmingly feminine that having hair seems brutish. I was just 10 days in Olorgesailie in a mainly Maasai area, when I finished a book I gave it to the younger girls to keep so they could read and practice their English. I did not
I picked this book up after a few years of looking at it on my book shelf, and I had a hard time putting it down. The memoir is organized non-chronologically in a series of stories you can imagine the author telling guests over tea or a glass of wine later in life. The author's tone is at times uncomfortably elitist/arrogant, although I assume you need a very healthy amount of confidence to live the way she did in Africa. Learning her views on race and class in colonial Africa is one of the most
Between the river in the mellow English landscape and the African mountain ridge, ran the path of this life. ... The bowstring was released on the bridge at Eton, the arrow described its orbit, and hit the obelisk in the Ngong Hills. Karen Blixen, Out of Africa This is a group read I participated in, and I am certain that I will not be able to do it enough honor with my review in attempting to convey this rich, lyrical and beautiful memoir of Karen Blixens years she spent running a coffee
I cried four times while reading this book. For the beauty of the writing (fireflies), the sentiment (the zoo animals, lulu) and for gratitude that this woman existed and wrote these words down. It's my favorite type of writing - descriptive and evocative. She is able to make me feel like I am there with her. I think she noticed and felt so much that she had to be a writer. I also admire her and how she lived her life. This was a strong woman who seemed to keep a sense of innocence that allowed
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