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Lädt ... The Oldest Orphanvon Tierno Monénembo
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Tierno Monénembo was among the African authors invited to Rwanda after the 1994 Tutsi-Hutu massacre to "write genocide into memory." In his novel The Oldest Orphan, that is precisely what Monénembo does, to devastating effect. Powerful testimony to an unspeakable historical reality, this story is told by an adolescent on death row in a prison in Kigali, the capital of Rwanda. Dispassionately, almost cynically, the teenager Faustin tells his tale, alternating between his days in jail, his adventures wandering the countryside after his parents and most of the people of his village have been massacred, and his escapades as a cheerful hoodlum in the streets of Kigali. Only slowly does the full horror of his parents' death and his own experience return to Faustin. His realization strikes the reader with shattering force, for it carries in its wake the impossible but inescapable questions presented by such a murderous episode of history and such a crippling experience for a child, a people, and a nation. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)843.914Literature French French fiction Modern Period 20th Century 1945-1999Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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Faustin, the narrator of the novel, is a 15 year old orphan of the massacre, who is imprisoned and awaiting trial after he is convicted of murdering another orphan who is having sex with his sister. The dialogue shifts rapidly back and forth between the present and various events leading up to the massacre in his town and after he and his siblings are able to escape from it. He is benumbed by what he has experienced, and is unable to recall exactly what has happened to his family and neighbors. He, like Mersault in Camus' The Stranger, is free of remorse for his actions, and cannot comprehend why society views him as a monster, as guilty as the génocidaires who killed his parents.
The story is infused with true events that occurred in the massacre, yet it is not an overly grisly tale. The focus is on the mind of Faustin, and how he loses touch with his siblings and those around him, until it is too late for anyone to save him.
I enjoyed this book, as it was taut and well written, but the foglike character of the narrative made it somewhat difficult to identify with Faustin, his family or other victims of the massacre. ( )