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A Girl Named Disaster (2003)

A Girl Named Disaster (2003)

Book Info

Author
Genre
Rating
3.78 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0439471443 (ISBN13: 9780439471442)
Language
English
Publisher
orchard

About book A Girl Named Disaster (2003)

An interesting read about a young girl from a remote village in Mozambique who sets off on her own journey to get to Zimbabwe. I offered this book as a book project choice to my fifth graders, and all of them who read it really enjoyed it. I dare say it was the most popular of the ones I offered. Having said that, as an adult there were parts of the story I really enjoyed and others that felt a bit long. Overall, I would recommend this for most 5th-7th graders, depending on their reading level.Nhamo is a young girl living in a remote African village. Her mother was killed when she was a little girl, and her father was an outsider who disappeared and is now living in Zimbabwe. When the spirit of a man her father murdered brings down a cholera infection on her village and calls for revenge, the local witch doctor says the only way to appease the spirit is to marry Nhamo to the brother of the deceased, a cruel man who already has several wives. Nhamo and her grandmother have different ideas, though, and Nhamo escapes to journey onward to her father's family in Zimbabwe. However, the journey takes much longer than expected and she must survive out in the African wilderness, growing and finding food, fighting with animals, and dealing with the harshness of being alone.I loved how this book introduced me to the culture of the Shona people in Mozambique. It did so in a way that didn't feel patronizing (like so many American Girl books and was respectful of the ideas and beliefs of the people. I learned a lot and felt totally immersed in the culture and ways of thinking of the people. I also enjoyed how the focus was on this African girl, but the main ideas weren't about the struggle between whites and blacks. That was mentioned, but the central character and her struggles for survival were the main focus. There were hardly any white people at all in the story and a discussion of race like that would have felt very forced. Instead, some of the major issues discussed were women's issues (how women should be educated and independent), the coming-of-age story (Nhamo becomes a woman during her travels), and the importance of family and doing what's right as opposed to doing what's traditional.All in all, a very enjoyable book I will be offering next year.

The story tells the life of a young girl named Nhamo who lives in a small village in Africa. She is an orphan and lives with her extended family who are very poor. In the story, we are told that, when he was alive, her father murdered a man whose family now want revenge. Nhamo is to be forced to marry the murdered man's brother otherwise his spirit will cast a deadly illness onto the whole village. The book then tells of Nhamo's journey as she flees the village and makes her way to Zimbabwe to find her father's family. Along the way she encounters many dangers including having to live on an island for months whilst building a new boat. Whilst on the island, Nhamo becomes part of a tribe of baboons who aid her in finding food. However, a leopard then kills one of the baboons which drives Nhamo off the island, as it was a leopard that killed her mother and it brings back feelings of nostalgia for the time her mother was alive. Eventually, Nhamo finds her father's family who happen to be extremely rich which leaves her living a life that seems a million miles away from her old life in the village.I really enjoyed reading this book because it was full of adventure and you never knew what was going to happen next. It also gave me an insight into the lives of people from other cultures and made me realise just how poor some people are and how they depend on the smallest things in life to make them happy. I liked that the book had a happy ending too because, after learning of Nhamo's horrific journey to get to Zimbabwe, I felt like I empathized with her and wanted her to get the happiness she deserved.

Do You like book A Girl Named Disaster (2003)?

This isn’t actually the first time I’ve read this book but I hadn’t read it for several years so when I saw it in the library the other day I decided to give it another try. I remember loving it, but how was it this time around? Well, it was okay. It’s nothing really all that special, despite the fact it was a Newberry honor book in 1997.It’s an interesting look at life in remote Africa that’s both interesting and unsettling. On one hand, it was fascinating to see the spirituality of a different culture. On the other hand, there were definitely some practices like the ngozi marriage Nhamo was going to be forced into that really are terrible. Nancy Farmer manages to balance out these ‘good’ and ‘bad’ elements in a non-biased way that tells a good story. I obviously can’t speak as to how accurate things are portrayed but Nancy Farmer included a bibliography and some further explanations for things she alluded to in the book.Nhamo is an excellent character. Sometimes she’s surprisingly mature, surviving out in the bush on her own for months at a time. Other times she’s very immature, throwing temper tantrums that you would expect from pretty much any preteen girl. This is definitely aimed at more of a middle grade audience so I think readers of this age will be able to identify well with Nhamo, despite the cultural differences.The only thing that stops this book from being a great book is the pacing. When things are interesting Nancy Farmer’s pacing was way too fast. And when things were more boring the pacing became uneven and the plot slowed down to a crawl. It reflects the actual time Nhamo spends in certain places but it doesn’t make for the most interesting read, believe me.So was A Girl Named Disaster as good as I remember? No, but it was still a pretty good story and if you have a preteen or young teen that likes to read I’d definitely recommend this book.I give this book 3.5/5 stars.
—Carrie Slager

My daughter read this in school and said I MUST read it. I liked it as well. It is like Island of the Blue Dolphins (which I also loved): an adolescent girl forced to survive on her own. This one takes place in Mozambique, and the girl is Shona. I really felt that I was inside this girl, her thoughts and feelings were so well portrayed. While she is alone she talks to spirits: her deceased mother, the deceased owner of the boat she is using and the water spirits. The fun part is that they talk back and she learns from them. It is also fun to read her perspective of the white people she encounters, Portugese, English, and Afrikaner. My view of the world isn't necessary any more "true" than hers. The girl has a tendency to get mad at things that don't go the way she wants (as adolescents are prone to do and adults sometimes too!) Like when her boat crashes on a rock and she yells at the rock for being there in the river "where a rock shouldn't be". In the end she comes to realize that some of the things that happened to her which seems terrible at the time actually helped to save her. Were the spirits looking out for her, or was she delerious and insane? In the end, the English scientist decides to withold judgement on that question... I am glad that there is a summary of the history of Mozambique and Zimbabue at the end of the book. That way I could put the story into context. I learned about the culture and way of thinking of the Shona people. It seems like it is true to their culture.
—Carol

This book is ANYTHING but torture!Nancy Farmer has really outdid herself this time! This book truly represents the rights that all children possess since birth to have family, to have freedom, to have justice.Nhamo, forced to courtship with a man she barely knows, flees her village in a stolen boat on a voyage to freedom. And with the assistance of her mother's spirit, a dead man and two water spirits, Nhamo doesn't have to face it all alone. With her courage, nature, spirit (and spirits) and faith, Nhamo sails on an epic journey to freedom- and more importantly, to her father.A great book that you just CAN'T afford to miss!!!(And, dude, I have a problem with the star ratings. I was changing my review again because I've just finished the book, and then I clicked on the stars, and they turned into boxes so don't be surprised if those stars suddenly disappear.)
—Ellen

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