Before The Knife: Memories Of An African Childhood Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Before The Knife: Memories Of An African Childhood Book

The novelist Carolyn Slaughter digs deep into her childhood to write Before the Knife, a bleak and disturbing memoir about growing up in pre-independence Africa under the spell of parental sexual abuse. Her story appears to involve "an ordinary English family living in a very remote part of southern Africa during the lingering years of British colonial rule". However, at the age of six Slaughter was raped by her own father, which "obliterated in one moment both the innocence of my childhood and the fragile structure of our English family life. We all knew". The book proceeds to paint a desperate portrait of the increasingly unhappy child and her emotionally crippled sister, controlled by a depressive, unsympathetic mother and a terrifying, violent father, a colonial official who enjoys beating the natives almost as much as abusing his family. Before the Knife is ostensibly about growing up in Botswana at a time when "cracks in the rigidly maintained colonial structure" began to appear, and there are deeply lyrical descriptions of the African landscape and Slaughter's identification with its inhabitants, but the horror of abuse pervades the book. Slaughter's problem is that she has tried to write two books, one about Africa, one about abuse. For her, both are inextricably connected, but her understandable hatred towards her father prevents her from speculating on the connection between colonialism and familial abuse, or explaining how she learnt to forgive, years after the death of both her parents. Some readers might find that Before the Knife is ultimately a little too personal for comfort. --Jerry BrottonRead More

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  • Foyles

    Carolyn Slaughter is the author of ten critically acclaimed novels, but for the last twelve years she has been completely silent. She had become conscious that there was something hidden in her past that had always haunted her fiction but which she had never fully faced. This powerful memoir is the result of confronting the truth about her traumatic childhood.Carolyn's father was in the colonial service, but he lacked power and was ashamed of his Irish origins. In private, he was capable of acts of absolute sadism. When Carolyn was small, they lived comfortably in Swaziland having left India during the Partition. But when she turned six, things changed. Her mother gave birth to another daughter and they were posted to a remote area in the Kalahari desert. Bereft of a civilized social life, her mother plunged into a deep depression and turned completely away from Carolyn. While her older sister found friends and left for boarding school, Carolyn suffered a desperate sense of abandonment and loss and turned to the landscape of the Kalahari itself for solace. The stark fact that Carolyn was first raped by her father at the age of six is contained within the prologue and epilogue of this book. What lies in between is the story of an extraordinary childhood in Africa and a moving depiction of the complexities at the root of our relationships with mother, father, siblings. Despite its sometimes harrowing contents, it is a work of great, dangerous beauty.

  • 0552776866
  • 9780552776868
  • Carolyn Slaughter
  • 20 April 2010
  • Black Swan
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 272
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