Reviews

The Girl Who Smiled Beads by Clemantine Wamariya

lbpleva's review against another edition

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emotional inspiring sad tense fast-paced

4.0

gtea_reader's review against another edition

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informative reflective fast-paced

5.0

lmorisse31's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective sad tense medium-paced

4.75

This book demonstrated so clearly emotional themes I have seen play out in the lives of loved ones in my life who are refugees from Rwanda. The themes were particularly relevant for those who are still young adults. I wish I had read it years ago. If someday Clemantine Wamariya decides to write another memoir reflecting on the decades of her life still to come, I will read it eagerly. 

acaudill_'s review against another edition

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adventurous emotional hopeful reflective medium-paced

5.0

xcgirl93's review against another edition

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challenging emotional medium-paced

4.5

"There’s a difference between story and experience. Experience is the whole mess, all that actually happened; a story is the pieces you string together, what you make of it, a guide to your own existence."

A very difficult but very important memoir of a young woman who, as a child and with her older sister, traveled through multiple refugee camps throughout several countries in Africa during the Rwanda Genocide. Clemantine, her sister Claire, and Claire's children are eventually granted refugee status and move to the United States where they must learn to reassemble their lives after years of turmoil and resiliency.

brielle619's review against another edition

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challenging dark informative inspiring tense medium-paced

3.75

alittlegreyfish's review against another edition

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5.0

Loved this. So interesting. A really intimate memoir where the author unpacks her childhood as a survivor of the Rwandan genocide and her process of adaption and culture shock when she moved to America and what it means to survive not only such horror but how it changes the lens in which you view everything around you and the relations with others. I did struggle at the beginning with the fact that it jumped back and forth between her time in Africa and her time in America (which was maybe more jarring b/c I did the audiobook). I LOVED the ending of the narration where the author herself speaks about the process of writing this memoir.

I also found the language beautiful.

"I’m excited for you to feel everything, every word. And for you to be aware that every word in this text matters, yes, and when you feel it, you feel which words that will heal, which words that hurt, and also which words that helps us evolve."

patchworkbunny's review against another edition

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3.0

I would have preferred Clemantine to read the audiobook herself. She speaks at the end of it, and it transforms the text. Robin Miles is an eloquent speaker, but this book didn't need to be read in such a clean manner.

towering_tbr's review against another edition

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3.0

I always feel terrible rating memoirs because I feel like I'm rating their life. That's not the case. I'm rating how they told their story. I didn't know much about the Rwandan genocide and felt she needed to include some background. Additionally, I felt the writing was mediocre and disjointing because of all the time jumps. I found the actual story of her leaving Rwanda and everything that happens quite compelling. But at the end she focuses a lot of her PTSD, anger, and speaking engagements which I was less interested in, especially because it seemed chaotically put together. Overall, it was illuminating but I could probably find something more informative than this book.

mariafernandagama's review against another edition

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3.0

This is a very powerful story, one that is worth telling and certainly worth listening to. The writing is very sensitive and beautiful, even though the subject is so terrible. It's very toucinhg to see somebody lay their hearts open for the world to see like this young woman did.

My only criticism about this is the editing/pacing, and it's something I'm not sure was entirely the author's doing or if it was an editor's interference. Either way, I felt sometimes the changea between places and times too abrupt and that sadly, it took some of the strenght of the carefully chosen words and constructed paragraphs. I understand the idea behind trying to tell everything in fragments, in tiny beads, I just think maybe the order of things got a little messy. But nonetheless, this is a great book, and it's worth reading.