000 01171nam a2200193 4500
010 _a99089888
020 _a9780375705779
024 _a48760005
050 _aPT5881.19.S24
082 _a839.31364
100 1 _aMoses Isegawa
245 1 _aAbyssinian Chronicles
260 _bVintage
_c2001
300 _a480 pages
520 _aLike Salman Rushdie's Midnight's Children and Gabriel Garcia Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, Moses Isegawa's Abyssinian Chronicles tells a riveting story of twentieth-century Africa that is passionate in vision and breathtaking in scope. At the center of this unforgettable tale is Mugezi, a young man who manages to make it through the hellish reign of Idi Amin and experiences firsthand the most crushing aspects of Ugandan society: he withstands his distant father's oppression and his mother's cruelty in the name of Catholic zeal, endures the ravages of war, rape, poverty, and AIDS, and yet he is able to keep a hopeful and even occasionally amusing outlook on life. Mugezi's hard-won observations form a cri de coeur for a people shaped by untold losses.
650 _aWar
650 _aCulture/Customs
999 _c1758
_d1758