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Thalia Book Club: Memoirs of Africa with Alexadra Fuller and Wendy Kann  By  cover art

Thalia Book Club: Memoirs of Africa with Alexadra Fuller and Wendy Kann

By: Alexandra Fuller, Wendy Kann
Narrated by: Alexandra Fuller, Wendy Kann
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Editorial reviews

In this live recording from the Thalia Book Club at Symphony Space in New York City, authors Alexandra Fuller and Wendy Kann discuss their memoirs of growing up in colonial Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). Fuller begins the evening with a series of entertaining anecdotes about her glamorous but alcoholic mother, while Kann discusses the genesis of her book and its relationship to the attacks of September 11th. Both women also read from their memoirs, and then share a fascinating a conversation about race, memory, history, being a woman in Rhodesia, and what it was like to come to America.

Publisher's summary

Alexandra Fuller (Scribbling the Cat and Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight) and first-time author Wendy Kann (Casting with a Fragile Thread) discuss growing up in colonial Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe. They tell many amusing and thoughtful anecdotes and reflect on their childhoods, the Rhodesian Bush War, revisiting a changed Africa as adults, the ties they have to the families and community that raised them in Africa, and the transition to living in the U.S.

Fuller begins the evening with a hilarious introduction to her relationship with her mother and a short reading from her memoir, which is followed by Kann explaining why she decided to write a memoir and then reading from her work.

This special event was recorded live as part of the Thalia Book Club series at Peter Norton Symphony Space in New York City.

Don't miss any of the Thalia Book Club author events.
©2008 Symphony Space, Inc. (P)2008 Symphony Space, Inc.

What listeners say about Thalia Book Club: Memoirs of Africa with Alexadra Fuller and Wendy Kann

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Introduction

Wonderful introduction to both authors.

Confess I am more than tempted to read how they both write.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Interesting conversation, poor audio quality

It was interesting to hear Fuller speak about her life and her writing outside the confines of the published memoir. I have read/listened to four of her memoirs and greatly enjoyed each. Here she seemed more assertive than I expected but every bit as interesting. I have not read Wendy Kann's book yet but plan to. I do wish the recording equipment had been better.

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    1 out of 5 stars
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Authors trying to be comedians

While I respect these two women and greatly enjoyed their books, this was sort of a waste. Although there was much to be said, they didn't. Too much time was wasted on adolescent giggling and vapid jokes. Believe me, these two are not destined for a comedy club. Also, the audio is very poor in too many places. Don't they have sound engineers in these productions to monitor? Did anyone ever remind them to speak clearly into the mike and keep their voices up?

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