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Paperback The Shrunken Dream Book

ISBN: 0889611750

ISBN13: 9780889611757

The Shrunken Dream

"Their world was three miles wide and fifteen miles long, a patch of rugged, rocky land along the upper slopes of Mt. Kamasai. At the foot of the mountain ran the Cheboiywa River, the boundary between the Nandi and Luyia. On the other side of the mountain, from Kapkeimur onwards, were European settlers and priests. But on the slopes of the mountain, in densest forest, the people of Kamasai lived completely cut off. The houses were built among the boulders. There were no grassy plains for cattle to graze on. The little grass they could obtain was found in gaps in the forest canopy where the trees allowed the sunlight to filter down. The produce of the women's vegetable gardens had to be shared with the monkeys that came from the forest around them. In this little world everyone knew every detail of everything that happened." - from The Shrunken Dream

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$34.59
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Customer Reviews

1 rating

Survival

In the context of the renewed interest in the cultural understanding of the Nandi people in a time of change and uncertainty, Jane Tapsubei Creider's book offers a fresh interpretation of a society undersiege. The characters in the novel are moving and unashamedly depict the Nandi way of life and speech. The tragedies and joys in the lives of the characters show what real life is and how people cope with it. Its value is even more manifest in the many flashback and the idioms used in the speeches of the charaters which reflect the knowledge of the author. The writers juxtaposition of the past and the present makes it even more contemporary while at the same time maintaining touch with the past. This being the only novel I know of written by a Nandi it offers not only a story but also the culture of the Nandi people their resistance to change. The saddest thing as I read the novel was the death of Cheptabut and the sadness that her husband Kiptai underwent. The death of Taptamus is equally sad. The lives of the characters and the tragedies they face are terrible. But inspite of the hopelessness of the situation there is respect and love. There is joy and there is the will to survive. This is one book that I would recommend for reading both for personal and anthropological purposes.
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