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Beneath the Lion's Gaze
Beneath the Lion's Gaze: A Novel | Maaza Mengiste
After his physician father, Hailu, is ordered to report to jail for helping a victim of state-sanctioned torture to die and his younger brother, Dawit, joins an underground resistance movement, Yonas prays to God for an end to the violence that has its grip on Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, and the rest of the country on the eve of revolution in 1974.
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DGRachel
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Pickpick

This is a really hard book to read. Mengiste does not shy away from details of torture tactics used by The Derg, during the civil war. The whole novel is brutal and sad. The audiobook is brilliantly narrated by Steven Crossley. I found it hard to remember names and relationships via audio, I would have bailed in print format. Crossley's voice kept me engaged, even when the plot became a slog or when the cruelty became too much.

BarbaraBB I just read another book by her. So hard too. 2y
Librarybelle It does sound like a hard read 2y
DGRachel @BarbaraBB I remember your review and I was going to pick a different book for Ethiopia, but then I couldn‘t find anything else. Hoopla had this on audiobook, so I thought I‘d just suck it up and power through. Checking #readingafrica2022 boxes! ☑️☑️☑️ 2y
54 likes4 comments
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HeathHof
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Hooray for #bookmail 📬 My pick for March #foodandlit #Ethiopia

TEArificbooks I might do this one too 3y
Come-read-with-me This looks great! 3y
66 likes1 stack add2 comments
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ElizaMarie
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So I decided to do this #audiobingo (since I‘m doing this for the year I‘m gonna go back and post the audiobooks I‘ve listen to this year already)

The genre is historical fiction... not one I‘m used to.

#bookishbingo

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ElizaMarie
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Pickpick

This was such a heartbreaking book but I‘m so glad to have experienced it. My learning more about different cultures this year (#20for20) has been so enlightening. I‘m glad I have this goal :)

#WinterBookBingo #WinterBingo #Challenge
@Honeybeegirl

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ElizaMarie
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Part of my New Year‘s resolutions is to spend each month learning about a new culture/country. This month is Ethiopia. I picked this book to help incorporate this goal. Diving into it tonight on my way home from work.

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Lesliereads
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“Her voice sounded rich and pure, as clean and gentle as spring. It made tears well in his eyes and he swallowed them to quench the dryness in his throat. He continued walking, afraid to reach for the cup in case the momentum hurled him to the ground. The woman brought the water to his mouth and tenderly cupped the back of his head, steadying him for a sip.
“I‘ll walk with you, just open your mouth,” she said.” #maazamengiste

WomanistBibliophile Intrigued! 4y
Lesliereads @WomanistBibliophile I was so engrossed reading this! 4y
12 likes2 comments
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Follow.my.read
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AkashaVampie Love the drink 5y
ehewett88 amazing cup love it 5y
66 likes2 comments
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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My heart is breaking with this book. I can see the echoes between what happened in my country and what happened in Ethiopia and I feel I understand a little of the pain they‘ve suffered. #ReadAroundTheWorld #Ethiopia

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BookishMe

"... (an) enemy and victim all in one night."

#readaroundtheworld #LitsyPassport #Ethiopia

Cindyelizavaz Hi! Have you received the package yet? After receiving two packages, I realised I‘ve been a rather bad postal Book buddy! I‘ll do better in my next post to you, and will include more goodies 😅 6y
BookishMe @Cindyelizavaz hello Cindy! I am expecting it later today... I recall it was a hectic month for you. 6y
22 likes1 stack add3 comments
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TheAnitaAlvarez
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It‘s a dark cold day on this side of the planet, the perfect weather to lie down and read my #ReadAroundTheWorld pick for #May, #Ethiopia, here I come!

jveezer That book is so good (and depressing). But soooooo good. And a story that needs to be read. 6y
TheAnitaAlvarez @jveezer I‘m woefully ignorant of Ethiopian history, so this is mind-opening 6y
jveezer That‘s how I felt. I was protesting Aparthied and remember Idi Amin at that time (yes, I‘m that era) but how did I not know about that catastrophe? I didn‘t even make the connection being a Bob Marley fan. This is exactly why I read widely outside the western white canon. 6y
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TheAnitaAlvarez I wasn‘t even born, but you‘d imagine this would‘ve come up in history classes or something... I don‘t think my parents could remember this, either (combination of being too young and our country going through a dictatorship in the 70s-80s) 6y
BookishMe I didn't even know there was an Italian Occupation ;o as grim as this book is, I am pleased with my choice :)) 6y
TheAnitaAlvarez @BookishMe I sort of knew about the Italian occupation because that did come up in my history classes (very briefly, while we were covering the antecedents of WWII) 6y
76 likes6 comments
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BookishMe
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SledgeReader Yay #librarybooks and Cutting for Stone. It makes me so happy to see Verghese on the Litsy circuit! You made my day! 6y
GatheringBooks i hope to crack open my cutting for stone too!! 6y
BookishMe @GatheringBooks hope you are feeling better now and back to your usual reading!! 6y
40 likes3 comments
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Tamra
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Pickpick

🗡💔 The cost of revolution. Reflects the painful cyclical reality that revolutionary forces are often worse than the regime overthrown. I appreciated the author using Amharic words & names. The book is pictured on my injera mat. (Which I have failed to use yet, despite my resolution LAST year.)

92 likes1 stack add
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Tamra
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My idealbookatoir is an outdoor one, camping next to a mountain stream. I 💜 it!! I sat next to this stream last summer reading about WY. @BarbaraTheBibliophage #idealbookatoir

JaclynW Beautiful! 6y
CocoReads I‘m not one for camping but I do like this scenery! 6y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Looks amazing!! 6y
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MaureenMc 🤩 6y
RebelReader Awesome! I like outdoor reading too 6y
SilversReviews Beautiful photo. 6y
Dragon What a great reading spot! 6y
kspenmoll Looks like a soothing place to read. Love reading near water of any kind.❤️📚 6y
tpixie Lovely! 6y
113 likes1 stack add9 comments
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jveezer
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Pickpick

This is a well-written and gripping book if read as historical FICTION; it‘s a well-written and frightening book when read as HISTORICAL fiction. It is amazing how quickly the machinery of fascism and totalitarianism can get set up by people ostensibly working in the interest of the “people”. Africa usually shakes free of the shackles of colonial powers only to fall prey to dictators backed by those powers. But Ethiopia was a sovereign nation.

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jveezer
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Whew. This one was hard to read at points. So disheartening how people get sucked into the fascist machinery of terror. So hard to read about torture and the suffering of the general populace. But it needs to be read.

Tamra This has been sitting in my nightstand for a long time. I need to pull it out. 6y
4 likes1 comment
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jveezer
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Nations that condone, teach, and carry out torture disgust me, including my own. How do we let this happen? How do we stop this?

RaimeyGallant Great questions. 6y
3 likes1 comment
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jveezer
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I'm in Macedonia for my poetry reading but Ethiopia for prose. I had a vaguely positive view of Selassie because of Bob Marley and the Rastafarians but I'm far enough into this book to change that view to negative. But with the rear view mirror of history, I know the Derg that replaced him was horrible.