The House at Sugar Beach : In Search of a Lost African Childhood
معرفی کتاب «The House at Sugar Beach : In Search of a Lost African Childhood» نوشتهٔ Cooper, Helene، منتشرشده توسط نشر Simon and Schuster در سال 2009. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
helene Cooper Is Congo, A Descendant Of Two Liberian Dynasties -- Traced Back To The First Ship Of Freemen That Set Sail From New York In 1820 To Found Monrovia. Helene Grew Up At Sugar Beach, A Twenty-two-room Mansion By The Sea. Her Childhood Was Filled With Servants, Flashy Cars, A Villa In Spain, And A Farmhouse Up-country. It Was Also An African Childhood, Filled With Knock Foot Games And Hot Pepper Soup, Heartmen And Neegee. When Helene Was Eight, The Coopers Took In A Foster Child -- A Common Custom Among The Liberian Elite. Eunice, A Bassa Girl, Suddenly Became Known As Mrs. Cooper's Daughter.
for Years The Cooper Daughters -- Helene, Her Sister Marlene, And Eunice -- Blissfully Enjoyed The Trappings Of Wealth And Advantage. But Liberia Was Like An Unwatched Pot Of Water Left Boiling On The Stove. And On April 12, 1980, A Group Of Soldiers Staged A Coup D'état, Assassinating President William Tolbert And Executing His Cabinet. The Coopers And The Entire Congo Class Were Now The Hunted, Being Imprisoned, Shot, Tortured, And Raped. After A Brutal Daylight Attack By A Ragtag Crew Of Soldiers, Helene, Marlene, And Their Mother Fled Sugar Beach, And Then Liberia, For America. They Left Eunice Behind.
a World Away, Helene Tried To Assimilate As An American Teenager. At The University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill She Found Her Passion In Journalism, Eventually Becoming A Reporter For The wall Street Journal And The new York Times. She Reported From Every Part Of The Globe -- Except Africa -- As Liberia Descended Into War-torn, Third-world Hell.
in 2003, A Near-death Experience In Iraq Convinced Helene That Liberia -- And Eunice -- Could Wait Nolonger. At Once A Deeply Personal Memoir And An Examination Of A Violent And Stratified Country, the House At Sugar Beach Tells Of Tragedy, Forgiveness, And Transcendence With Unflinching Honesty And A Survivor's Gentle Humor. And At Its Heart, It Is A Story Of Helene Cooper's Long Voyage Home.
the New York Times - Caroline Elkins
at Its Heart, the House At Sugar Beach Is A Coming-of-age Story Told With Unremitting Honesty. With Her Pedigree And Her Freedom From Internalized Racism, Cooper Is Liberated To Enjoy A Social Universe That Is A Fluid Mix Of All Things American And African…while Cooper's Memoir Is Mesmerizing In Its Portrayal Of A Liberia Rarely Witnessed, Its Description Of The Psychological Devastationand Coping Mechanismsbrought On By Profound Loss Is Equally Captivating.