From Publishers Weekly
In this illuminating and textured, if pedestrian account of life in the Peace Corps, the grandson of former President Jimmy Carter (who has written the introduction) shows that he, too, might be headed for high places. After graduating from college, Carter spent two years in the late 1990s volunteering in a former black homeland, as South Africa tried to build itself anew in the aftermath of apartheid. Assigned to the tiny, and poor, community of Lochiel, Carter takes the political and turns it into the personal as he writes candidly of his attempts to help create a new curriculum; he reflects on his efforts to raise teachers' self-esteem without trampling on their turf. Carter depicts life with humor and honesty and considers the limits of his stint, the way Western culture has become part of South Africans' lives and his guilt at enjoying its trappings as he travels around the country. Now a law student at the University of Georgia, Carter provides a lens on contemporary South African life that demonstrates his optimism for the future, tempered by his acknowledgment of continuing racial tension. The result will make readers sympathize with the author and empathize with the situations he describes without being maudlin. 16 pages of color photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Carter, the grandson of former president Jimmy Carter, spent two years as a Peace Corps volunteer training teachers and living with a family in an impoverished village in South Africa. He also visited Nelson Mandela, but the heart of this lively, highly readable story is the white American student's daily life with ordinary South Africans. That he spoke Zulu and Siswati gained him immediate acceptance. Sharing computer skills, books, and music, he made close friends and experienced personally the strong enduring community. There is a refreshing absence of romanticism in Carter's account, not only about village life without running water and electricity but also about any good that he can do. And yet, there's no weary sophistication, either: his commitment is passionate, and so is his anger at the continuing apartheid residue of poverty, violence, and racism. He has fun as a tourist, too, but he can't get over the shock of his village being just a few miles from the most luxurious Western lifestyle. A great read for those who want more than vanishing-tribes exotica.
Hazel RochmanCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved