Wendy Scarfe
Autor de A mouthful of petals
11 Obras 35 Miembros 5 Reseñas
Obras de Wendy Scarfe
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Denunciada
anzlitlovers | Jan 22, 2022 | >Wendy Scarfe is the author of Hunger Town, (2014, longlisted for the Kibble Award), and The Day They Shot Edward, (2018) and I featured her in Meet an Aussie Author in 2015, but until I read this updated edition of A Mouthful of Petals: Three Years in an Indian Village, I had not really grasped what a remarkable woman she is. I wonder, when the good folk of Warrnambool encounter her in the shops, do they realise who she is?
My image of Wendy is based on an elegant publicity portrait, so it's difficult for me to imagine her living in the squalor of an Indian village in the 1960s. But that's what she and her husband Allan did, for three years, and A Mouthful of Petals is the story of their sojourn.
So the book is not your usual travel book, but like the best of travel books it takes the reader into a different world. This is a world in marked contrast to the images we see of an increasingly prosperous India today: Britannica tells me that with its well-developed infrastructure and diversified industrial base, India has made astonishing progress since independence. It's now one of the wealthiest countries in the world by some reckonings; and it's home to three of the biggest and most cosmopolitan cities in the world, (Mumbai, Kolkata, and Delhi). From its massive population it draws on a huge pool of scientific and engineering personnel to be among the world's preeminent hi-tech centres of IT and software; and it's a world leader in cultural exports of music, literature, and cinema. But the country's population is still mostly rural, and India's rapid agricultural expansion still depends on a work force still living in poverty. Literacy is still a long way from being universal and there is a depressing gender disparity too.
A Mouthful of Petals takes us into that world of grinding poverty and ignorance. Allan and Wendy put their social justices principles into practice in the village of Sokhodeora in Bihar in 1960, travelling there to set up an experimental rural school, develop the curriculum, and organise the infrastructure. But they ended up doing much more than that: running night classes; offering family planning advice and resources; doing rescue feeding for starving children; adding shark-liver oil to the kindergarten daily milk supply to cure malnutrition sores; installing lavatories; dealing with exasperating caste issues; and in a village where even matches are a luxury, even setting up the village radio.
They adopt a little girl called Vidya and suffer guilt when she thrives amid other babies barely clinging to life. And they are not alone in feeling intense frustration when ignorance makes the situation even worse than it needs to be...
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2020/09/18/a-mouthful-of-petals-three-years-in-an-india...… (más)
My image of Wendy is based on an elegant publicity portrait, so it's difficult for me to imagine her living in the squalor of an Indian village in the 1960s. But that's what she and her husband Allan did, for three years, and A Mouthful of Petals is the story of their sojourn.
So the book is not your usual travel book, but like the best of travel books it takes the reader into a different world. This is a world in marked contrast to the images we see of an increasingly prosperous India today: Britannica tells me that with its well-developed infrastructure and diversified industrial base, India has made astonishing progress since independence. It's now one of the wealthiest countries in the world by some reckonings; and it's home to three of the biggest and most cosmopolitan cities in the world, (Mumbai, Kolkata, and Delhi). From its massive population it draws on a huge pool of scientific and engineering personnel to be among the world's preeminent hi-tech centres of IT and software; and it's a world leader in cultural exports of music, literature, and cinema. But the country's population is still mostly rural, and India's rapid agricultural expansion still depends on a work force still living in poverty. Literacy is still a long way from being universal and there is a depressing gender disparity too.
A Mouthful of Petals takes us into that world of grinding poverty and ignorance. Allan and Wendy put their social justices principles into practice in the village of Sokhodeora in Bihar in 1960, travelling there to set up an experimental rural school, develop the curriculum, and organise the infrastructure. But they ended up doing much more than that: running night classes; offering family planning advice and resources; doing rescue feeding for starving children; adding shark-liver oil to the kindergarten daily milk supply to cure malnutrition sores; installing lavatories; dealing with exasperating caste issues; and in a village where even matches are a luxury, even setting up the village radio.
'Wendy sister, Allan brother, what can you do about it if the man on the radio tells lies?'
'What do you mean?' we asked in some astonishment.
'He said it was going to rain today but it hasn't rained at all.'
So there was no doubt of the radio being educational. (p.98)
They adopt a little girl called Vidya and suffer guilt when she thrives amid other babies barely clinging to life. And they are not alone in feeling intense frustration when ignorance makes the situation even worse than it needs to be...
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2020/09/18/a-mouthful-of-petals-three-years-in-an-india...… (más)
Denunciada
anzlitlovers | Sep 18, 2020 | Set in 1916 when the First Conscription Referendum was tearing Australia apart. It is told from the perspective of a little boy called Matthew whose naïve observations portray family life at a difficult time in history.
Denunciada
QRM | otra reseña | May 4, 2020 | The Day They Shot Edward is a perfect little novella, set in 1916 when the First Conscription Referendum was tearing Australia apart. It is told from the perspective of a little boy called Matthew whose naïve observations portray family life at a difficult time in history.
A small cast of characters convey the conflict. Matthew’s teacher at school bullies her class into contributing to the war effort. Matthew, who has a horror of killing things – even the yabbies that he catches in the pond – runs away when, for once, he has a farthing given to him by his mother’s ‘friend’ Edward but is honour bound not to contribute:
Matthew doesn’t understand that he is poor, because apart from the daily boredom of school, his life is rich with activity and he revels in the love of his grandmother and the affection of Edward. And while the boy has an instinctive distrust of a man in a brown suit who is always hanging around and asking questions, he certainly doesn’t understand that Edward is under surveillance for his political activities.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2018/02/18/the-day-they-shot-edward-by-wendy-scarfe/… (más)
A small cast of characters convey the conflict. Matthew’s teacher at school bullies her class into contributing to the war effort. Matthew, who has a horror of killing things – even the yabbies that he catches in the pond – runs away when, for once, he has a farthing given to him by his mother’s ‘friend’ Edward but is honour bound not to contribute:
Matthew had no money. By turns he begged his mother, Gran and Edward for a penny but they all refused. His mother said that there were no extra pennies in a house without a breadwinner. Gran said that she was Irish and saw no reason why she should contribute to the ego of any woman loyal to the Empire. Edward said that he would give him a penny but not to contribute to the war because it was a capitalist war in which poor people suffered for the rich.
When he asked Edward who the poor people were, Edward surprised him by saying: ‘Families like yours and mine. We’re the poor. We’re the little people. We creep around on the ground or pull the chariots while the rich people ride’. (p.20-21)
Matthew doesn’t understand that he is poor, because apart from the daily boredom of school, his life is rich with activity and he revels in the love of his grandmother and the affection of Edward. And while the boy has an instinctive distrust of a man in a brown suit who is always hanging around and asking questions, he certainly doesn’t understand that Edward is under surveillance for his political activities.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2018/02/18/the-day-they-shot-edward-by-wendy-scarfe/… (más)
Denunciada
anzlitlovers | otra reseña | Feb 17, 2018 | Estadísticas
- Obras
- 11
- Miembros
- 35
- Popularidad
- #405,584
- Valoración
- ½ 4.3
- Reseñas
- 5
- ISBNs
- 28
One Bright Morning is a story set around a pivotal moment in Australia's history.
The chilling prologue is dated 19 February 1942 in Darwin:
The back story then emerges. Zeny, in her early twenties, is living and working independently in Kuala Lumpur as the Japanese advance through Southeast Asia. She hesitates to evacuate for misguided reasons, and ends up being rescued by a couple of coast watchers.
(This put me in mind of Anthony English's Death of a Coast Watcher which vividly depicts the complexities, dangers and ethical issues confronting Australian spies operating in Japanese-occupied territory. See my review here).
Zeny's voyage in a camouflaged fishing vessel with Bill and Joe is not without danger, but it sidesteps the disastrous Fall of Singapore which had been Zeny's original destination. She arrives in Darwin not only unable to explain the covert circumstances of her arrival, but also to the realisation that Darwin is no safe haven anyway.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2022/01/23/one-bright-morning-by-wendy-scarfe/… (más)