My latest book is out! It is available on Amazon. I will write more about it later. Meanwhile, here is a blurb: In My African Anthology retired ambassador Robert Gribbin draws upon almost sixty years of contact with Africa to spin tales, recount anecdotes, and air opinions. Themes in this wonderful collection include trafficking in girls, a long missing treasure, Gacaca justice, fleeing from Ebola, searching for a legendary beast, the U.S. military presence, the emperor’s gold, captured by rebels, a Rwandan update, election sagas, and much more – dogs, golf, spirits and black magic. In total the collection of pieces – both fiction and non-fiction, humorous and serious - paint a realistic portrait of Africa, its peoples and its issues as seen and experienced by an astute observer. The collection provides just the right mix of history and modernity, with deep insights into Africa.
Monday, September 2, 2024
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
President Moi's Personal Physician
My review of Heartbeat – An American Cardiologist in Kenya by
David Silverstein, available from Amazon, 2023.
The book opens in the hospital emergency wards following the
bombing of the U.S. embassy in 1998. That sets the tone for the story to come.
The memoir is replete with brief case studies of individuals who required his
medical services and a narrative of how more broadly viewed medical services in
Kenya improved during the course of the past forty years. (In fact, there was more medical recitation
than I enjoyed, but those who are well versed in medicine will undoubtedly
appreciate these sections.)
I did value Silverstein’s observations about Kenya’s
political scene and its political elite. Many folks are mentioned but the two
most prominent are President Daniel arap Moi and Attorney General Charles
Njonjo. Silverstein became doctor to
both of them. He saw them regularly and
became friends with each. Since he was not involved with Kenyan politics, they
had no agenda with him and his with them was medical, personal and supportive.
Silverstein’s observations about the human side of the men rings true.
Silverstien portrayed Moi as a carefully spoken man who
thought matters through before acting. Indeed, his observations of Moi add a
dimension to the understanding of this complex leader. Especially poignant was Silverstein’s care
for Moi after he retired from the presidency and on into his last years.
Anecdotes abound, for
example, as part of the presidential entourage, Silverstien accompanied Moi on
foreign trips. One such foray was into Iran, where Silverstein’s American
citizenship and Jewish ethnicity, almost proved disastrous but instead turned
into a good story.
Throughout the book, as is true with all memoirs, we learn
about the author – what makes him tic, family issues, including two different
sets of sons, and finally a wife to sustain him. All in all, Heartbeat is an
entertaining read, especially for those who knew Kenya from the seventies
forward.
Saturday, June 1, 2024
Castigation of the Raj
A review of Burma Sahib by Paul Theroux, Mariner Books, NYC, 2024
Theroux jumps back in time to take the actual sojourn of
Eric Blair, later known by his pen name of George Orwell, in Burma in the
1920s and turn it into a novel. Blair was a policeman for
Britian, the imperial power of the country.
Theroux grafts onto the facts of Blair’s five years there to create a
novel. Perhaps some of the internal machinations - places, people, and
introspection - of the sojourn are drawn from records of the era. But to his credit, Theroux exercises literary
license in compiling a gripping and insightful novel.
Let there be no mistake this book is an indictment of the
British Raj, of British rule in Asia.
Blair is a willing pawn in the oppressive imperial rule. Yet throughout,
in his mind he questions most everything about his and his government’s
presence in the Asian backwater. The
book tracks Blair’s thinking, his reactions, his rejections, his muses, his
lusts, and his memories as the story progresses. Needless to say, Blair is a
bundle of contradictions. As with all of
Theroux’s characters in his many books, no one is pure. All characters are complicated,
and many are venal. That is certainly true in this story. Theroux never seems to find many redeeming
features in the people he creates. This
harsh criticism of people lends veracity to the story, but makes a reader
wonder if the world is really that bleak?
There is no real plot to this book. It just tracks the five
years that Blair spent in Burma. The reader wonders if the man will ever adjust
or quit, but that is about it for suspense.
Above criticism notwithstanding, I enjoyed the book. It is a
well written page turner. It elucidates in fictional form a period in George
Orwell’s life that helped shape his antiauthoritarian views that surfaced years
later in Animal Farm and 1984.
More than that it cast a realistic perspective on British classism,
racism and imperialism. We all need to learn from the past.
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