Reviews

Harmattan by Gavin Weston

jenmat1197's review

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3.0

This is the story of Haoua - a 12 year old girl. She lives with her parents and siblings in a remote village in Niger. Her mother soons takes ill and has to be taken away to a hospital for treatment. Haoua's brother and neighbors inform her that their mother is HIV positive and the outcome is going to be grave. In the meantime, Haoua's father decides he wants to take a second wife. The second wife is terrible to Haoua and her siblings - treating them more like servants than children. Haoua's father is gone more than he is at home.



Haoua wants desparately to find her mother and visit her before she dies, so she enlists the help of one of her father's friends to get to her brother and then get to the hospital to see her mother. The travel to and from is treacherous, and when Haoua comes home, she finds out that her father has promised her to her father's friend to be married. At 12 years old, she becomes the wife of a terrible man and begins a completely different path she was hoping for.



This book was just okay. It isn't well written, and the story was a bit too long. The characters don't have a lot of depth. It is a very depressing story, that I am sure is true to reality, but still just really, really depressing.

serendipitysbooks's review

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dark emotional reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

 
Harmattan is the story of Haoua, a young girl living in a remote village in Niger. When we first meet her she lives with her parents and two younger siblings in a mostly happy and stable environment. She’s bright and curious, fortunate to be able to attend school due to foreign sponsorship. The letters, postcards and small gifts from her sponsors offer her a glimpse of another life. But then several crucial things change for Haoua, and her dreams are wrenched from her. This, sadly, is not a story with a happy ending.

Many aspects of this story will be familiar to readers. The impact of the AIDS epidemic on families, the barriers to girl’s education, the ramifications of a mother’s death on young children - especially daughters, and of course child marriages are sadly well known. However, Weston has packaged them in readable story with a compelling protagonist. In addition he explores the mixed impact and limits of aid agencies and child sponsorship, areas he has been personally involved with, and which have inspired this story. The hostility towards aid workers, the ability of agencies to leave when things got difficult, and the well meaning but naive cluelessness of sponsors were just a few of the points that stood out to me. Weston also has Haoua’s story play out against a period of political turmoil in Niger, which adds another layer to the story.

A solid if depressing read.
 

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