3.67 AVERAGE


“His cry went on through the final image: the spots of raw bright blood on the earth. Blood on excrement. The supreme moment, high above the desert, when the two elements, blood and excrement, long kept apart, merge. A black star appears, a point of darkness in the night sky’s clarity. Point of darkness and gateway to repose. Reach out, pierce the fine fabric of the sheltering sky, take repose.”

What a mind bogglingly beautiful way to describe death. This was one of few moments where Bowles steps back, from what seems like open disdain for his main characters, to apply some grace and compassion.

There is nothing to Shelter you from hardship and horror (clearly evident in where Bowles takes Kit) no Sky to protect from the weight of the world and, most importantly, though you may think the world is broken because you witnessed the wanton time of World War II, if brut death or careless brutality comes to your door you are going to cower and or evade because, ultimately, you still want to live.

Is this book worth reading?

Absolutely.

bear in mind that my rating scale is dependant on personal enjoyment, not literary value. keeping that in mind - what the actual fuck did i just read.

i actively dislike introductions that do a plot summary because they basically spoil key details which i think is shitty and stupid. but i still didn’t expect this book to take the turn it took, and i’m still not 100% sure what happened.
adventurous emotional mysterious reflective tense medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
adventurous dark medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

There seems to be serious division on the quality of writing versus the story being told. Perhaps refer to other reviews for more details on both of these topics.

For me, the story of a jaded, entitled, young, American couple and several other odd Americans traveling around the world/Africa, has an uphill battle to catch my interest. The questionable behavior
Spoilerbrothels, adultery, incest, mental illness/anxiety...
accompanied by a side of classism makes a disturbing combination to me, which overshadows the writing style.

Spoiler Add to this the highly improbable behavior of Kit and her multiple sexual assaults subsequent to Port’s death, and I’m done.

So....several days after finishing this book, I'm still not quite sure what to make of it. Maybe that's the sign of a great work of literature, that it leaves you unsettled and unsure, but it also might be the sign of a work that doesn't quite translate into another era.

The book describes the travels of 3 white, upper-class Americans into various African towns and communities. I spent sometime online figuring out where some of these towns were, since most of them were not recognizable (the book also takes place just after WWII, which means many of the state names have since changed).

Early on, Port (which feels like such a hipster name to my modern reader's brain--which really might just be an apt classification for translating character type to modern day) hears a story about 3 sisters that went off on a quest to drink tea in the Sahara. These sisters predictably die (not a spoiler, it's a short story told in the second chapter), which lends the entire novel an ominous overtone.

I suppose I am glad that this book was not a rich-white-people travel to Africa to rediscover their true selves kind of book. Such books often seem to give whatever setting (Africa, Asia, South America...anywhere that might be read as "exotic" or "other") short change-- it is merely the backdrop for someone's transformation. Those books often read to me as flat, two-dimensional. This book did not follow that hackneyed plot line.

And yet...it still managed to treat the places and the people very decidedly as "other". I'm still not sure the extent to which that was simply a sign of times (and how most white writers would have simply seen the subject) or whether it was an intentional exploration of that "otherness" that pervades travel novels of the period.

One confused review posting later, I am still unsure of what to make of this book. But it certainly has left me thinking, for what that might be worth to others.
adventurous challenging dark reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

Utterly bizarre batshiz insane. Especially the last part. Kind of can’t quite get over it. 

I've had this book on the shelf for decades--literally--before I finally got to it. The song "Tea in the Sahara" by the Police in 1983 inspired me to seek it out at a used book shop. It was such a unique work for its time, and I loved the way Bowles portrayed the sense of isolation and longing through the environment around the characters. Had no idea Bowles hung around William S. Burroughs, Gertrude Stein, et al until I read the biography in the back...but it totally makes sense now that I've read the book. This one's going to stick in my mind for a long time. I love stories that delve into deeper thematic elements like this!

Hmm. I don't know. I was really enthusiastic about this book throughout the first third or so. Bowles was such a master at painting beautiful (and horrible) pictures with his words, but I started to lose interest when the plot (and the characters) started to dissolve. I guess I wanted more, somehow.
adventurous dark tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated