Africa Books
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Used price: $1.20

Trickster Tales DelightReview Date: 2008-05-31
A Really Funny Story!!Review Date: 2005-03-27
By, Tucker
Funny, but lessons learned.Review Date: 2004-12-11
The little spider has dealings with all the animals in his neighborhood about his messy house. While everyone else cleans and works he sleeps. Finally he decides to do something about it, but with someone else's tool, not thinking of the result.
This book made us crack up. At the same time, it taught us a lesson about not being greedy, and doing your own work.
I recommend it highly.

Used price: $3.00
Collectible price: $10.00

Trickery at its best!!Review Date: 1999-03-31
Great for preschool/kindergarten agersReview Date: 2000-05-31
Anansi the trickster strikes again!Review Date: 2001-06-28
After boring into one of Elephants melons, he eats himself too big to get out!! So, Anansi waits to get thing again...Only, he's bored! So he decides to amuse himself at Elephant's expense... and Hippo's...and Warthog's...Well, you get the idea.
This is a cute story about a trickster spider. Janet Stevens' illustrations are, as always, excellent. Anansi is not just a regular spider. Stevens gives him expressions and a personality. You wind up laughing with Anansi's pranks. Very well done!
I would definitly recommend this book. I read it to a group of young school age kids - 5-9. They could kinda tell where the story was going, but were more than willing to sit for the ride.

Enjoyed it!Review Date: 2008-07-07
For teachers, this product is useful in many ways:
1) as an addition to multicultural units
2) as an example of "public" speaking
3) as an example of storytelling for effect (acting / voice / dialogue)
4) as an engaging listening exercise
LiveReview Date: 2006-06-18
Lively & enjoyable story tellingReview Date: 2006-06-04

Used price: $359.26

an excellent informative workReview Date: 2004-01-23
A Brilliant Book!Review Date: 2001-11-28
Absolutely Stunning!
P.S: Looking forward to another one.
Inside AfricaReview Date: 2000-03-18
Highly recommended!
Daniel Kuhlmann, Stockholm

Used price: $12.50

Has All the Virtues Its PredecessorReview Date: 2001-12-20
Excellently presentedReview Date: 1999-07-21
finally, a collection of translationsReview Date: 2000-05-15

Used price: $134.00

ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS THAT I READ!Review Date: 2000-04-09
Excellent introduction to the Egyptian languageReview Date: 2006-12-21
*not* to learn hieroglyphs - a serious linguistic bookReview Date: 2000-08-17

Used price: $48.50

How Imperialists' Forefathers Robbed South AfricaReview Date: 2005-10-28
These are excerpts from the Freedom Charter of the South African National Congress, which led the revolution against apartheid to victory in the 1990s. Was it supported by the leaders of the "Free World", the U.S. and U.K., who are now waging war in Iraq and Afghanistan for "democracy"? Not on your life. They supported and profited from the apartheid system. Learn how forefathers of today's imperialists took the land of South Africa by force and unspeakable terrorist violence against the masses of South Africa.
Other suggested Reading: The Struggle is My Life by Nelson Mandela
New International No. 5, "The Coming Revolution in South Africa," by Jack Barnes.
An excellent look at apartheid policyReview Date: 2005-08-29
Practically from the time they set foot in what has become South Africa, white settlers from Europe laid out plans to disenfranchise blacks from their land. Through a series of wars, laws and theft, the descendants of Dutch and British settlers managed to disposses blacks and appropriate 87 percent of the land for themselves.
The great land theft was as vital to sustaining apartheid as was cheap black labor in the nation's gold and diamond mines and other industries. But from the beginning, blacks resisted white claims on their land, which became codified in the Freedom Charter of the African National Congress. Its leader, Nelson Mandela, who was imprisoned for his fight against apartheid, became the first president of free South Africa in 1994.
Harsch's pamphlet is based on two articles he wrote in the Dec. 16, 1985 and Dec. 30, 1985 issues of the newsweekly Intercontinental Press. He describes the social inequalities of apartheid land system, and the fight to eradicate them.
Black farmers were turned into sharecroppers, land tenants and peasants on land that they had farmed communally for centuries before the arrival of the white settlers.
When they were given some land, it was often the least arable and only in small plots. White farmers benefited from government loans and assistance, while blacks were left on their own.
White farmers often preferred to hire black women in the fields because the lack of child care meant they also benefited from the labor of their children, Harsch reports. Beatings and punishment of blacks were common.
The apartheid masters created 10 Bantusans, so-called national homelands for blacks. But they were a cruel joke. In the Ciskei homeland, Harsch writes, dry land conditions managed to feed very few people. "Just 27,000 of the 375,000 rural Ciskeians have enough land to enable them to also keep cattle. Nearly a third of the Ciskei's people have no land at all," according to Harsch. "In the Ciskei, 40 percent of the population is unemployed, and 89 percent of the children suffer from malnutrition." This, in one of Africa's richest countries.
Convincing case for land-reform Review Date: 2005-07-29

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Brings you up-to-date on ProconsulReview Date: 2005-09-22
easy scienceReview Date: 2005-09-12
By the time I finished the book I had come to appreciate just how much the history of paleontology has influenced its current state. That and I've been reading similar books for five decades and this background plus the bi-monthly headlines about the NEWEST DISCOVERY in the popular press can really become an overload, especially as theories in the field are so changeable. So the first half of the book which deals, often from a biographically oriented perspective, with this history was very helpful. And Shipman himself is no dogmatist, treating all fairly as far as I could tell. Also the general theme of not forcing our current catagories (ape/monkey,in this case) onto the fossil record was very helpful.
The second half of the book is more involved with the science itself. Ever wonder how a fragment of a jawbone can lead some researcher to identify the animal as an adolescent female member of the ape family? Read this book and wonder no more. It was just amazing to see how many general conclusions can be drawn from sometimes very limited fossil remains and if you don't already know I suggest you buy this book to find out. There's plenty of science in the last chapters and very manageably but not condescendingly served up.
Oh, "ape in a tree": Proconsul: a)fossils found in a hollow tree trunk b)lived in or among trees c) is in our family tree. Did I miss any?
An insider's journey through the discovery and history Review Date: 2005-06-08
Used price: $7.42

Covers an overlooked areaReview Date: 2002-03-27
A glittering view of Ghana and its historyReview Date: 2000-04-30
A glittering view of Ghana and its historyReview Date: 2000-04-30

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Collectible price: $14.99

FinallyReview Date: 2005-09-28
Eye Opening, Heart Shattering Call to ActionReview Date: 2003-12-04
The book is not written in novel format, rather it is a compilation of letter from great minds worlwide: Nelson Mandela, George W. Bush, not to mention my new personal hero Bono of U2, and the list goes on forever. Though it is broken into letters, it is still very readable, though I would only recommend it for teenagers and up.
If you don't want to have your heart broken for the African people to the point of inability to remain silent and still, don't read this book. It will change you; it will mark you, and you will be compelled to respond to the call to action.
Changed my LifeReview Date: 2002-10-08
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This beautifully illustrated book captures the fun of the Anansi tale while also teaching the importance of one's personal and social responsibilities. What is very nice in this story is the character of Anansi actually looks like a spider whereas in some children's books, he is shown in a more human-like form.
The tale is fun to read out-loud. It echoes the same universal themes as The Sorcerer's Apprentice, and some intriguing lessons might come from comparison / contrasts activities.