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The Zanzibar Chest: A Memoir of Love and War
Unavailable
The Zanzibar Chest: A Memoir of Love and War
Unavailable
The Zanzibar Chest: A Memoir of Love and War
Ebook547 pages9 hours

The Zanzibar Chest: A Memoir of Love and War

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMay 26, 2011
ISBN9780007380268
Unavailable
The Zanzibar Chest: A Memoir of Love and War
Author

Aidan Hartley

Aidan Hartley was born in 1965 and raised in East Africa. He read English at Balliol College, Oxford, and later politics at London University. He joined Reuters as a foreign correspondent and has worked in Africa, the Balkans, the Middle East and Russia. In 1996 he began travelling and writing on his own.

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Rating: 3.765156060606061 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was a fantastic book, though I must admit parts of it are very tough to get through- more on that later. It is also really multiple stories combined into one book.1. The title refers to a chest his father had with diaries and journals detailing his fathers work during the last 30 some years of British colonial rule in Africa and Yemen. 2. The book details the author's quest to travel to Yemen and learn as much as possible and see the location that make up his fathers friend's journal, and to learn how and why he died.3. The author was a front line reporter who covered what happened in Somalia starting in 1990.4. The author was front line reporting from the beginning on the genocide that took place in Rwanda.It is # 3 and 4 that make this book a tough read, and the author himself says what he reported and has written for the book do even begin to convey the horrors he witnessed.The majority of Africa went from being ruled by Europe and the people being treated like shit, to being ruled by dictators who the people either elected or who took over via a coup, and treated the people like shit. And when those leaders were toppled a new madman dictator took their place, to loot the country and treat the people like shit. This is why there are certainly no easy answers to fixing Africa, if in fact there is a fix.What I liked about the author's perspective is that it wasn't sermonizing, it wasn't pointing the finger at just one group and saying Them, they are 5he reason the country is a mess. Everyone associated with the countries of Africa are to blame.By the end of the book it is clear the author is suffering severe PTSD, but as this came out 12 years ago that tag wasn't used to label his condition.If you want an introduction to the atrocities committed in Somalia and Rwanda, if you want an introduction to the good as well as the bad that the British contributed to Africa and Yemen, if you want a history lesson and an adventure, or if you want to be exposed to the pure evil the human race is capable of, read The Zanzibar Chest.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This rating suffers because I don't think Hartley necessarily knew what he was onto at first--great stretches of this read like an "imperial family" memoir by one if its most insufferably smug scions, and much ore entertaining swathes like a foreign correspondent's memoir, which is much more interesting and colourful of course although also even more smug (the way he writes about his sexual "exploits" cannot be borne outside of fiction, and then there is also that awful subtitle), and there is a brief concern that he will go all torture porn on you, but no--i think this book was an attempt to write his way through the experiences that haunt and poison you--in Hartley's case, Rwanda, Somalia--until you know there's something fearsome that has emerged from inside you in response and is turning your dreams into fears. The fact that the only thing that makes that better is time, and then only if you give it air, and let it heal "very slowly, from the inside." And to get there he had to write through the other stuff. And while the combination makes for a much more unusual book, the way we get breezy and breezy and then the hard bulletin is not easy to take. But then it can't have been easy for the people who were there either, and certainly it makes me more capable of toughening up and handling my seventeen-hour cashless stint as a ghost in Addis Ababa airport, where it's so cold right now.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    There is a fair amount of reportage in this book, much of it harrowing although delivered with the nonchalence and detatchment of the war reporter, and yet one detects that the thick skin is more cosmetic, self protective and indeed in due course it falls away. It is Hartley's inate love and empathy with Africa and Africans, and a hard earned camerarderie with the various hacks and rhino skinned media folk he falls in with, which lifts the writing above that of documentary. In the end it is the story of Aidan Hartley.Hartley's fascination with Africa comes from a childhood spent listening to rich stories of his parents and their friends, exotic stories of the late colonial period, of respect and adventure, and moreover of their love of the continent and its people. The trouble for Hartley is that he is attached to those stories ingrained in his physche but his African view is very different and his days are spent in the immediate post colonial era with change and volatility all around. He comes to recognise that change through the stoicism of his parents, and especially his father who is forced to adapt and although he is useful being fluent Swahili and a skilled negotiator with the Africans, his frustrations are there to see and feel and his retisence grows as nostalgia fades. Hartley finds himself sent to England for education and becomes influenced by the swinging sixties and intoxicated with social revolution. DRAFT - to be completed
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Aidan's life started out not unlike mine (same boarding school in England, overseas parents, Reuters) and then turned in to my friend David's (Reuters, war correspondent, adrenalin junkie, burn-out). So of course I found this book interesting, but I'm not sure I would have been held by it otherwise. The interweaving of memoir and self-discovery through forensic exploration of family history didn't work -- loose threads all over.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Hartley, descended from a family venerable old colonialists, occasionally glamorizes colonialism a bit much for my tastes. Still, this is an interesting book by a white man who's never considered himself anything but African. If you're interested in rarely covered areas like the history of Somalia or why newspapers failed to publicize the Rwandan genocide before it was too late, this is a good place to go.