Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Kaffir Boy
Kaffir Boy: The True Story of a Black Youth's Coming of Age in Apartheid South Africa | Mark Mathabane
18 posts | 21 read | 18 to read
How the author raised himself from squalor in the streets of South Africa.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
CaffeineAndCandy
Pickpick

This began as a riveting and heartbreaking story. The memoir was so action-packed I couldn't believe it was true at times. When compared to slavery in America, we have nothing on what took place in South Africa. This book tells the story of how a young man defeated the odds that were stacked up to the moon against him. He followed his heart and his dreams and they came true. Recommended for everyone. Surprised it wasn't required reading in school.

CaffeineAndCandy ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 4y
39 likes1 comment
quote
CaffeineAndCandy

Owen estimated that to play in both tournaments would cost about 600 rands ($500)... he would have to work continuously for a year, getting up at 4 in the morning 🌞 and coming home at 9 in the evening🌚; and we would have to go without food 🍔, medical treatment, paying rent, etc.

blurb
CaffeineAndCandy
post image

I have about 50 pages left...

quote
CaffeineAndCandy

To die fighting for one's freedom is no sacrifice, for life without freedom isn't worth living.

27 likes1 stack add
quote
CaffeineAndCandy

"That's where you're wrong, Jackson. Educating our children is the only way out of this pit of poverty."

"Me? Wrong?" my father said, stupefied.

??

35 likes1 stack add
quote
CaffeineAndCandy
post image

From that day onward, I never again felt ashamed to tell people, when they asked me, that Granny was a gardener 👩‍🌾 or that she, my mother or father never went to school 🎒. In a way, that incident helped me overcome the type of shame that leads many people to deny their heritage, to forget where they come from, for the sake of acceptance.

Josee.lit.a.lu.et.lira Beautifully healing 🤍 4y
CaffeineAndCandy Ty 😊 @Josee.a.lu.lit.et.lira 4y
37 likes2 comments
quote
CaffeineAndCandy

For years afterward I was to think of that suicide attempt in the following terms: whenever the troubles of the world 🌏 seem too much, it helps to have someone loving ❤ and understanding to share those troubles with.

Ruthiella Seems you were able to find something to read that you like! I sent you a few books yesterday using media mail. They are supposed to arrive by September 9. But we‘ll see, what with the post office in straits. 4y
CaffeineAndCandy Yes, this book is really good, thank the heavens! I'm about halfway finished since yesterday. You're so sweet and thoughtful, thank you so very much 🙂😘 @Ruthiella I can't wait to get them. 4y
CaffeineAndCandy There's another one titled The Bear and the Dragon with 1000 pages I'm hoping to enjoy as well. I think is should hold me over 🤔 @Ruthiella 4y
See All 8 Comments
Ruthiella @Booksy I sent pretty generic stuff since I didn‘t know what you like. You might end up just adding it to the library at the convalescence home. 😂 4y
CaffeineAndCandy @Ruthiella I sincerely doubt it. Majority of the books there are Nora Roberts and romance is something I don't enjoy so much. Large print and Nora Roberts are the two genres 😂😂 and Nora Roberts in LP of course. 4y
Chrissyreadit I sent a couple books your way that should arrive by Tuesday at latest. I‘m hoping they are ok. Not romance, highly rated but maybe you have read them (I hope not) 4y
CaffeineAndCandy @Chrissyreadit thank you! That was so sweet of you and I am waiting patiently (kind of) to get them. Thank you. 4y
CaffeineAndCandy @Ruthiella I meant to say Danielle Steel...not Nora Roberts. 4y
31 likes8 comments
quote
CaffeineAndCandy

...in the mid - 1950s Alexandra boasted a population of over one hundred thousand blacks, Coloureds and Indians-- all squeezed into a space of one square mile.

😲

blurb
CaffeineAndCandy
post image

These two seem more promising... 🤞

review
Tove_Reads
post image
Pickpick

Want to know how life was for blacks in townships in SA during apartheid? Read this book! It is horrible and great at the same time. Life is as tough at it can be with hunger, diseases, police beatings, prison time, bribes, robberies, and all the bad things that has to do with suppression and poverty. I have been to these townships after apartheid, and it's hard to imagine that it has been so much worse. Most definitely worth a read! #SouthAfrica

25 likes2 stack adds
blurb
Tove_Reads
post image

If you have not read this book, read it now! This should be compulsory reading for everyone! You can get it for free right now https://archive.org/search.php?query=Kaffir+boy&sin= Plus, if you know people who constantly complain about their lives, make them read it. Let us never forget what apartheid was like. Truth is stranger than fiction.

36 likes3 stack adds
blurb
Sleepswithbooks
post image

I eat food like I read books... no ability to restrict myself #airportabundance #doublechinsfordays #nomnomnom

That-Bookish-Hiker That looks delicious! 🤤 7y
Craftylikefox That looks so good 🤤 7y
Sleepswithbooks @That-Bookish-Hiker and @Craftylikefox - It was!! I ate it all and now feel like an overweight rhino 🦏 7y
30 likes3 comments
blurb
Sleepswithbooks
post image

Reading on Walpole Island #Memorialdayweekend2018 #nonfiction

25 likes2 stack adds
blurb
Isierranichole
post image

In honor of #blackhistorymonth I‘ll be reading these three books! What books either authored by or written about the black community do you recommend?

rachelk I thought, ‘Americanah‘ and ‘We Should All Be Feminists‘ (both by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie) were very good. 7y
25 likes1 comment
blurb
amvs1111
post image

She's not on litsy, but my daughter's current book sounds like an incredibly powerful read about a black South African boy's experiences during apartheid. Moving true story for this MLK weekend.

#litsypartyofone

21 likes4 stack adds
blurb
Bookpearl
post image

Pearls pick for the month of January.

Nute A very good book. 6y
9 likes1 comment
review
Deborah42
post image
Pickpick

An eye-opening memoir about life under apartheid in South Africa. I can't even imagine living in those conditions, let alone finding a way to rise above them.

Mathabane describes the squalor and poverty he faced as a child. I especially admired his mother. Even with her own limitations--a lack of education and a patriarchal system that left her little respite from abuse and endless childbearing--she fought to give her children a better life.

blurb
whatthelog
post image

#photobookchallenge day 26 - banned book

I didn't want to go with one of the classic banned books, so I chose Kaffir Boy! It is an autobiography of Mark Mathabane, a South African who was raised in Johannesburg during Apartheid. Since I recently read Trevor Nunn's Born A Crime, I feel like I need to read more about this period. Any recs for me?

#blackhistorymonth #diversebooks #nonfiction

19 likes1 stack add