Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Great African Reads discussion

Always Another Country
This topic is about Always Another Country
18 views
Regional Reads - Books 2025 > Mar/Apr 2025 | Always Another Country by Sisonke Msimang

Comments Showing 1-7 of 7 (7 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Anetq, Tour Operator & Guide (last edited Mar 06, 2025 02:58PM) (new)

Anetq | 1000 comments Mod
This thread is for the Mar/Apr 2025 read of Always Another Country by Sisonke Msimang.
As this month had an equal amount of interest in the three books I've set up threads for all of them, but not a separate spoiler/non-spoiler thread - just the one :)
Feel free to discuss book editions, availability, expectations, impressions and thoughts!


George P. | 235 comments Thanks Anet, I have a copy of this and look forward to starting in next few days.


message 3: by K (new) - added it

K (billielitetiger) | 5 comments Thanks from me,also. I've just begun reading it and think its quite good.


message 4: by World (new)

World Literature Magazine | 5 comments Dear all,

Please read the question I asked to the post for "All Your Children, Scattered by Beata Umubyeyi Mairesse."

It applies to all three books, so I avoided pasting it here.

Thanks.


message 5: by Anetq, Tour Operator & Guide (new)

Anetq | 1000 comments Mod
Hi George & K - Any progress? What do you think of it?


message 6: by George P. (last edited 20 hours, 26 min ago) (new) - rated it 4 stars

George P. | 235 comments I'm just past halfway through the book now, and have enjoyed reading the story. It actually "reads fast" as I sometimes say, but I've been reading several other books including a very long one (Infinite Jest by D F Wallace). Her descriptions of her time as a US undergrad in Minnesota and how the American civil rights struggle affected her was particularly interesting to me.
I might finish it within a week or two.


message 7: by George P. (last edited 20 hours, 27 min ago) (new) - rated it 4 stars

George P. | 235 comments I finished about 4 days ago. Msimang has had a fascinating but not an easy life and she tells her story very well. She grew up in Zambia, Kenya and Canada and then lived in the US and South Africa. She doesn't fail to be critical of her errors and also criticizes others at times, including the South African ANC, of which her grandfather was a charter member/cofounder. She has an interesting TED talk available on streaming video. I bought my copy for $4 used online.


back to top