West with the Night | Beryl Markham | West with the Night
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West with the Night
West with the Night
Beryl Markham
North Point Press
, 1982 - 320 pages
average customer review:
based on 118 reviews
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highly recommended
A very special book
I read this book about 10 years ago so this is not a fresh review and I won't attempt to recall all the book's details.
But I can tell you it was one of the best books I've ever read. Not necessarily for the story itself, although it is quite interesting on it's own.
What made it so memorable for me was the quality of writing and the style of it. She evokes such intense feelings of nostalgia and loss - of an era gone by, youth passed, and people lost. Whenever I put it aside while reading it, I was aching to the point of tears - I compare it to the nostalgia/loss I felt while reading other novels like How Green Was My Valley and Angela's Ashes.
I am not trying to say this is a sad storyline as it is not. But I felt that I was experiencing what the author felt while writing it from her memories.
It's quite a shame the book is not more known in general. Those who have wandered via Amazon to this book, I deeply encourage you to purchase it while it is still in print. The paperback will suffice - it's of the bigger size - and it is not overly long or difficult to read.
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West with the Night
This book was extremely well written. It is so well written that I am at a loss to describe it. It is a work of art. Read it.
Hemingway was right
Ernest Hemingway raved about this book - and for good reason. It is a fascinatingly multi-layered story told in a way that makes it very compelling and utterly believable. One of the greatest books I have read. It comes with controversy - maybe Beryl did not write it all herself. Still, she was a remarkable woman.
Hardcover is out-of-print, however...
The hardcover is the illustrated (with photos) edition of one of my favorite re-reads. Hemingway loved it, too. It is memoir that reads like fiction and it doesn't matter to me who wrote it (Beryl or her husband, as the scuttlebut goes). As a bookseller, I sell this one with a guarantee that if my customer doesn't like it they can return it for a full trade credit. None have been returned but many customers have dropped by to say that they have shared their copy with family or friends.
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A 5 star book about a 2 star woman
This a wonderful, mostly true, story about the early years and astonishing adventures of a young woman who grew up as one of the real "Out of Africa" characters. The other reviews do a good job of describing the story line of the book, so I won't repeat that.
At the time I read the book, I knew little about Beryl, and was so fascinated by this beautifully written, "Hemmingway-esque" book and its heroine that I wanted to know more. First, I read Mary Lovell's autobiography. I thought it was surely a "negative" biography and wanted to try to understand Beryl in a positive light. Then I read the much more impartial and well-researched autobiography by Errol Trzebinski, and realized that as a human being, there was little to like or admire about Beryl; Lovell's book turned about to be sugar-coated!
I came to realize that while "
West
with the
Night
" is an accurate description of Beryl's actions, it is a whitewash of her as a person and very misleading. Also, there is such overwhelming evidence that she did not write this extraordinary book, that I am surprised that she is still given credit for being its author. Even at the time, Hemmingway himself doubted that she could have written it. And he was in a position to know as it was written flawlessly in his style and he, shall we say, knew her "well." She barely had a high school education, rarely read anything, and never wrote another word. She wasn't even a letter writer. However, her naïve, love blinded and ill-fated husband, Raoul Schumacher, an experienced ghost writer, did possess the ability to write the book, and most certainly did; the early drafts of the book that were later found leave no doubt about this. Even in her dotage, Beryl refused to give credit to Raoul.
Beryl Markham grew up near Nairobi, raised by a loving father, and was an acquaintance of the much older and now famous Baroness Karen von Blixen. Karen initially thought of her fondly, but came to understand that Beryl was no friend of any woman. It was Beryl Markham that Karen was referring to in the movie when she was furious with Dennis Finch Hatten for having an affair with a younger woman. In real life, both Karen and Beryl aborted his children; one of the few untruths in "Out of Africa" was that Karen was infertile as the result of syphilis.
Beryl's list of sexual partners is a who's who of the times and includes royalty, and other celebrities. However, Dennis may have been the one man that Beryl actually cared for - probably because he cared so little for her. Even so, it must have been difficult for her to have him die during a period in which they were on again, and while flying an errand on which Beryl had originally planned to join him; and then for Karen to play the role of "widow."
Perhaps that was part of what made her such an unpleasant, moody, selfish, misogynous and promiscuous woman, although she had a pretty good start on that prior to Dennis's death. Also, she was no doubt affected by her mother's abandonment when she was a toddler, only to find out much later in life that the woman she thought was her mother, was not. That does not explain, however, Beryl's immediate and irrevocable rejection of her only child, a son, who was born with a rectal defect that required several surgeries and who was later somewhat sickly. The fact that he was not strong and manly was always an embarrassment to her, and she spent very little time with him.
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