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To Asmara
December 2021: Other Books
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To Asmara by Thomas Keneally - 3.5 stars
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I have only read Schindler's List by this author and have wanted to try others by him. Is this a good place to start or do you have others that you have read that you think might appeal to me?
I do not think To Asmara is the best place to start, as it is a bit unusual for him and based on his travels in Sudan and Eritrea during the Eritrean War for Independence. I have Confederates, The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, and The Daughters of Mars on my TBR, so maybe one of those?
I just remembered I have read a book by Keneally that would make a great starting point:The Widow and Her Hero by Thomas Keneally - 4 stars - My Review
Books mentioned in this topic
The Widow and Her Hero (other topics)Confederates (other topics)
The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith (other topics)
The Daughters of Mars (other topics)
Schindler’s List (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Thomas Keneally (other topics)Thomas Keneally (other topics)


Set during the Eritrean War for Independence in the late 1980s, Australian Timothy Darcy is a journalist seeking an interview with a high-profile Ethiopian prisoner of war. He travels with a small group from Sudan to Eritrea. The group includes Henry, an American relief worker attempting to get his Ethiopian fiancé out of the region, Christine, a French woman searching for her father (a cameraman filming the war), and Dame Julia, a humanitarian seeking to educate local girls on health issues. Their journey takes them through the heart of the war zone.
“We climbed the last bends and entered, through a stone doorway in the mountainside, the tail end of the trench system. We were in a deep, cool sap. Beneath a roof of logs and earth to our right, a wide compartment was crowded with soldiers. As my eyes got used to the dimness, I could see that here yet another class was in progress! Third grade science, Moka said.”
Darcy is the narrator, so this book feels like following a journalist on his assignment. He goes into the historical background of the conflict, the famine that occurred simultaneously, the toll taken on the civilian population, and the factions involved. I do not think it is a stretch to say the typical western reader will learn a lot about this time and place in history. An unnamed editor breaks in occasionally to provide context.
A few of the storylines seem superfluous, such as the situation with Darcy's Australian wife, who has left him and is living with another man. I am unsure how this part is supposed to fit with the Eritrean-Ethiopian conflict. Otherwise, it is well-written historical fiction.
3.5