Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Play Book Tag discussion

Roots: The Saga of an American Family
This topic is about Roots
12 views
Archive: Other Books > Roots by Alex Haley / 4****

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Book Concierge (last edited Apr 14, 2016 05:27AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Book Concierge (tessabookconcierge) | 8244 comments Roots: The Saga of an American Family Alex Haley
Book on CD performed by Avery Brooks.
4****

Haley’s blockbuster history of his ancestors begins with the birth of a baby boy � Kunta Kinte � in a small African village in the Spring of 1750, and ends two centuries later in Arkansas.

It’s a gripping tale and Haley is a great story teller. I was engaged from page one and found myself very interested in all aspects of the book � from Kunta Kinte’s boyhood in Africa, to his experiences as a slave, to the continued story of his descendants and how they kept the story of “the African� alive through the generations.

Haley’s narrative focuses on three of his male ancestors. Kunta Kinte’s story takes nearly half the book. His grandson “Chicken George� occupies much of the middle third of the book. And George’s son Tom, is the focus of the next major section as the family is emancipated at the end of the Civil War. I am struck by the fact that Haley gives little attention to the women in his ancestral line. Not only is Kizzy given short shrift, but Tom’s daughter Cynthia and granddaughter Bertha (who is Haley’s mother) are given less attention than their husbands � Will Parker and Simon Haley. And this, despite Haley’s statements that it was the “old women� � his grandmother, aunts and cousin who passed along the story of “The African� and his descendants. Still, this is a small quibble.

Avery Brooks does a magnificent job narrating the audio book. He is an accomplished actor and really brings the characters to life. His deeply resonant voice was mesmerizing, and despite his naturally deep timber he managed to give a believable voice to even the young girls.

While the book is catalogued by libraries as nonfiction / biography, Haley obviously had to invent the dialogue he uses for much of the book. (I find it interesting that more readers tag this as “fiction� than nonfiction.) When published the book was a runaway best seller, but also somewhat controversial. Haley was accused of plagiarism and he settled the case out of court, admitting that many passages from The African by Harold Courtlander appeared in his book. Additionally, many genealogists have questioned his research and feel that official records do not confirm the story much before the Civil War. None of this information takes away from the great story, however.


message 2: by Ellen (new)

Ellen | 3399 comments I read this so many years ago, probably right after the excellent mini-series. I would love to do the audio if I can find it,


message 3: by Sarah (last edited Apr 15, 2016 11:21AM) (new) - added it

Sarah | 195 comments I had never heard about the plagiarism stuff against him. The tv series was before my birth, so I didnt see it till I was old enough to appreciate it, and I bought the book a couple years ago because Im in to genealogy. The controversy is all very surprising and not at the same time.


message 4: by Patty (new) - added it

Patty | 87 comments I loved the mini series. I think this was my first mini series I had ever seen. I read the book many years later and loved it even more.


back to top