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Ancestry

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Over the past five decades, Albert Wendt has created a complex and unique fictional world inhabited by one of the richest assortments of characters in our literature. In this, his latest collection of short stories, he continues to explore the nature of love, family, and culture through the lives of people caught between the sometimes violent and destructive realities of modern contemporary life, and the ancestral ties of their heritage. Set in the Pacific, including Hawai'i, Aotearoa / New Zealand and Samoa, the stories are told with insight, wisdom, humour, and compassion. A masterful meditation on the ties that bind people together across time and place, Ancestry is Albert Wendt at his finest.

306 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2012

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About the author

Albert Wendt

48 books66 followers
Albert Wendt was born in Apia, Samoa.
Wendt's epic Leaves of the Banyan Tree (1979) won the 1980 New Zealand Book Awards. He was appointed to the first chair in Pacific literature at the University of the South Pacific in Suva. In 1988 he took up a professorship of Pacific studies at the University of Auckland. In 1999 Wendt was visiting Professor of Asian and Pacific Studies at the University of Hawaii. In 2001 he was made Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for his services to literature. In the 2013 Queen's Birthday Honours he was appointed a member of the Order of New Zealand.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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265 reviews3 followers
October 3, 2021
Brilliant writing, very easy to read and loads to think about. I really wish I could understand Samoan! My intellectual capabilities are nowhere near as good as Wendt's so can't pull this together into a comprehensive piece of text, but various thoughts were:

-I like the tribute to the grandparent, especially for example in "One Rule", where they triumph. Is there a particularly noticeable generational divide at the moment? A few stories seem to suggest so.
-I also see that non-nuclear families are explored a lot. Think we could do with more stories like this. Prompts an interesting suggestion that not all parents are good parents.
-Very good for understanding a bit more of Pacific literature given references to other authors.
-No translator, so language question to the author (apart from the very obvious "what does all the Samoan mean") is around the use of swearing - there's a lot. Also the use of 'darling', is it just used a lot in normal speech?
11 reviews
May 27, 2023
I’m finding this read very tiresome, the characters are a bit mundane and I haven’t found a hook yet.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews