The Calling of Katie Makanya.

By Margaret McCord

ISBN: 9780471673583

Printed: 1995

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons. New York

Dimensions 17 × 24 × 3 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 17 x 24 x 3

£31.00
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Item information

Description

In the original dustsheet. Maroon board binding with gilt title on the spine.

  • F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

Winner of the Johannesburg Sunday Times Alan Paton Prize for Nonfiction. Discover a people′s enduring power through the inspiring life of a fascinating woman.

Critical acclaim for ‘The Calling of Katie Makanya’

  • “A very marvelous and precious document. . . . It is a magnificent story superbly told. The combination of Katie′s extraordinary life and McCord′s immense talent as a storyteller is overwhelming. I found it compulsive reading and deeply moving.” ––Athol Fugard.

  • “I fell in love with the Delaney sisters, enjoying both the book and the play. It is good to know their sister in Africa also has her say, that Katie′s life, too, can be shared.” ––Nikki Giovanni.

  • “To know the story of Katie Makanya is to feel the pain and promise of life for blacks in South Africa for generations.” ––Detroit Free Press.

  • “Emotionally compelling, resonantly detailed, and of extraordinary cultural significance.” ––Kirkus Reviews.

Review: The Calling of Katie Makanya A Memoir of South Africa Her mother’s entry in the family Bible recorded “a second daughter, Katie, born on July 28, 1873 at Fort Beaufort in the Cape of Good Hope.” Because it was milking time, Katie’s father would call her by her home name, Malubisi, or “Mother of Milk.” Colonialism was at its height when Katie Makanya was born in South Africa. When she died at the age of 83, the British Empire had all but disappeared, and apartheid was firmly in place. During the intervening decades of epochal historical change, of turbulent social transitions and profound political and cultural upheavals, Katie’s courage and determination gave her the strength and will to triumph over poverty and hardship. The Calling of Katie Makanya is an award–winning look at the inspiring life of an exceptional woman. One of six children, Katie grew up watching British Redcoats drilling and hearing stories of the Zulu king Cetshwayo’s fierce attempts to drive the white men into the sea. While still quite young, she showed a natural talent for the rhythm and melody of the languages around her, “all so similar yet each as different as the notes of a song.” Katie became fluent in English, Dutch, Xhosa, and Sotho. Before she was twenty, her youthful inquisitiveness and talent took her, and her sister Charlotte, to England as members of the Jubilee Singers. Yet, despite promises of wealth and fame as a performer, the already determined young woman vowed to return home, to marry, and to raise a family. Katie’s life back in South Africa would have its share of bitterness and personal tragedy. Leaving behind Durban and Johannesburg because “I don’t want to live among white people any longer,” Katie sought peace in the country, settling near the Adams Mission at Amanzimtoti. There she met the McCords. James McCord, a white doctor who had come to treat the Zulus, needed an interpreter and assistant. Katie Makanya had found her calling. Before her death, Katie related the remarkable story of her life to Dr. McCord’s daughter Margaret. This beautiful oral history, filled with haunting remembrances of a richly led life, is sparked by the wisdom of a brave and inspiring woman. The Calling of Katie Makanya will capture your heart. Through its compelling narrative of one woman’s life, we discover a people’s enduring power.

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