by Vanguard Press
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 3666 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $2.65 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Label: | Vanguard Press |
| Pages: | 899 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Publication Date: | 2007-05-22 |
| Published By: | Vanguard Press |
| ASIN: | B000WHAZLA |
| Category: | Book |
Authors
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
Tracing his ancestry through six generations - slaves and freedmen, farmers and blacksmiths, lawyers and architects - back to Africa, Alex Haley discovered a sixteen-year-old youth, Kunta Kinte. It was this young man, who had been torn from his homeland and in torment and anguish brought to the slave markets of the new world, who held the key to Haley's deep and distant past.
Customer Reviews
A beloved book marred by flaws - Reviewed on 2008-03-11
2 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.
I love Roots and think the whole world should read it. It's an important and vital book about American history, family history, and triumph over hardship. I loved Roots the first time I read it twenty years ago, and I love it still, having just finished it yesterday, BUT...
1) If only Alex Haley hadn't plagiarized whole sections of the book (see Wikipedia's article on the author Harold Courlander)
2) If only Haley really HAD been related to Kunta Kinte (genealogists state he consciously perpetrated a hoax)
3) If only Juffure really WAS Haley's ancestral village (evidence suggests that the griot from modern Juffure with "memories" of Kunta Kinte's disappearance in 1767 was coached about what to "remember")
I found these fabrications depressing. And what's so sad is that I believe Haley had no need to lie and cheat, because he's really a top-notch storyteller.
This aside, though, I have a few other critical comments.
1) The book begins a slow descent into petering out after Kunta Kinte exits. The characters become increasingly wooden and one-dimensional. Kunta is great, Kizzy is good, Chicken George is fair, and everyone and almost everything after that is forgettable.
2) The book lauds having tons of children, mindlessly, and fails to criticize parents who have children and cannot provide for them. Haley makes it seem that having children and passing on the family name, no matter what horror the child risks getting subjected to, is the noblest of goals. I disagree! It sounds crass to say that slaves shouldn't have had children, but I hold all parents, slaves or not (rape victims being an exception), responsible when they knowingly bring children into a world of hell. (And Chicken George - a neglectful parent, to say the least - bringing 8 children into slavery? Nothing admirable there!)
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Book Subjects
- Blacks In The U.S.
- History Of Blacks
- Biography & Autobiography
- Biography / Autobiography
- Biography/Autobiography
- Ethnic Studies - African American Studies - Histor
- People of Color
- Ethnic Studies - African American Studies - General
- African American families
- African Americans
- Biography
- Haley family