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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Review: Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness by Alexandra Fuller

Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Genre: Memoir (??)
Hardcover 256 pages
Book Source: TLC Book Tours
My Rating 94/100


In Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness Alexandra Fuller braids a multilayered narrative around the perfectly lit, Happy Valley-era Africa of her mother's childhood; the boiled cabbage grimness of her father's English childhood; and the darker, civil war- torn Africa of her own childhood. At its heart, this is the story of Fuller's mother, Nicola. Born on the Scottish Isle of Skye and raised in Kenya, Nicola holds dear the kinds of values most likely to get you hurt or killed in Africa: loyalty to blood, passion for land, and a holy belief in the restorative power of all animals. Fuller interviewed her mother at length and has captured her inimitable voice with remarkable precision. Cocktail Hour Under the Tree of Forgetfulness is as funny, terrifying, exotic, and unselfconscious as Nicola herself. 
[Click here for more from Goodreads....]


My Thoughts:

This book is about the author's mother, Nicola Fuller of Central Africa, and her life growing up in both Scotland and Africa, but mainly Africa. Nicola was born and raised in Southern Africa for the most part, with the exception of some time spent in the UK in. Like any interesting person who has a book written about them, Nicola is quite the character. She actually strikes me as being a little off, but if you consider the life she has led and her family history of taking "vacations" in sanitariums, then Nicola is really not all that bad.

Although, some of the things she subjected her family and children to are a bit much.  When you have to tote a machine gun or some such around, it's time to find another place to live. The author herself relates stories of her own childhood growing up in Africa, I think to shed light on her mother. All of these stories are amusing, but if you think about the actual events going on in the African countries they lived in at the time, it's pretty nuts.

I enjoyed this book a great deal for several reasons. The writing is beautiful and her descriptions of Southeast Africa are breath taking. It makes me want to visit someday or at least read more stories set in Africa. Regardless of what you think about Nicola Fuller of Central Africa, the woman has led an adventurous life, filled with heartache to be sure, but also filled with a fascinating quality that I can't quite describe. Nicola was a British colonial farmer in Southern Africa, around the time when many countries declared independence and organized themselves. I think that says it all right there.

This book also provides an abbreviated history of British colonial Africa and the experience of a white person living through it. Truth be told, these colonists should have known better. There are two hundred thousand of you and you expect to rule over a few million people and think it's ok? I felt like Nicola had some romantic notions or was a bit indignant about the whole process of independence. I'm not trying to judge, but this part of the story bothered me a bit, yet it was interesting. It made for compelling reading. Regardless of what I think, Nicola loved Africa. It is in her blood and she must live there, come hell or high water. I can certainly understand those feelings.

I should also mention that this book is the author's second. Her first, referred to by her mother as that "AWFUL BOOK" was written in 2003. I haven't read it but I certainly plan to.  I should also add that I think Cocktail Hour is a stand alone book and not reading the first did not diminish my ability to enjoy the story.

For more information, please visit Alexandra's website: http://alexandrafuller.org/node/1

Here are the rest of the stops on this tour:

Tuesday, August 16th: Jenn’s Bookshelves
Wednesday, August 17th: Luxury Reading
Thursday, August 18th: StephTheBookworm
Monday, August 22nd: Rundpinne
Tuesday, August 23rd: Lit and Life
Wednesday, August 24th: Jenny Loves to Read
Thursday, August 25th: Silver’s Reviews
Friday, August 26th: A Fanatic’s Book Blog
Monday, August 29th: An English Major’s Junk Food
Tuesday, August 30th: Unabridged Chick
Wednesday, August 31st: BookNAround
Thursday, September 1st: red headed book child

Thanks to TLC Book Tours for including me on the tour.

Comments (17)

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I love that her mom calls her previous book "that awful book" - it was a great read but I can see why her mom didn't like it!

I'm glad you enjoyed this one! Thanks for being a part of the tour.
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
Yes that bit cracked me up every time, and I got a visual too. Thanks for asking me to join the tour. I really enjoyed the immensely :)
I went into this book with preconceived notions of the kind of white people that settled in Africa and there was certainly a lot in the book that reinforced my ideas. But there was much that made me realize that some of these people really just did not "get it." And they loved the land so much that they couldn't see past that. I really enjoyed this one.
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
Perfectly put. They so did not get it, and I don't think they ever really did. Still enjoyed this book too. I will definitely read her first one also.
This sounds quite fascinating, and I am very cautious about memoirs or tributes. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
Me too. They never seem to work for me but this read like a fiction book to me.
I'm really interested in this book since it's a memoir of sorts. I can't imagine living in a place where you had to tote machine guns around.
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
No me either, and I certainly wouldn't want my kids around it either, but Alex doesn't seem damaged so its all good :)
This one sounds fascinating! I'm intrigued by your description of the author's mother!
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
Oh she is quite the character. She is what she is and makes mo bones about it.
Sounds good.
1 reply · active 707 weeks ago
Thanks Irene :)
Wow - I gotta say, the title of that book is a little clunky for me.
Umm...By clunky I mean that it makes me think the book will use a little too much description.
1 reply · active 706 weeks ago
Jennygirl73's avatar

Jennygirl73 · 706 weeks ago

The title is a bit much but description wise I thought it was just enough. I don't like books that go on and on with physical descriptions. This one conveyed what the sky looked like in a sentence or two. Hope that helps :)
Thanks for stopping by!
I really enjoy memoirs about Africa ...
1 reply · active 706 weeks ago
Then I would definitely check this one out. �thanks for stopping by :)

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