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Thirty Girls
Thirty Girls | Susan Minot
3 posts | 6 read | 8 to read
A "New York Times" Notable BookAn "Economist" Best Book of the Year Esther Akello is one of thirty Ugandan teenage girls abducted from a Catholic boarding school by rebel bandits. Held captive by the Lord's Resistance Army, Esther is forced to witness and commit unspeakable atrocities. She struggles to survive, to escape, and to find a way to live with what she has seen and done. Jane Wood is a sensual, idealistic American writer who is traveling across Africa, hoping to give a voice to young people like Esther and to find her own center. In unflinching prose, Minot interweaves the stories of these two astonishing young women who, as they confront displacement and heartbreak, are hurtled inexorably closer to one another. With mesmerizing emotional intensity and stunning evocations of Africa's struggles and beauty, Susan Minot gives us her most brilliant novel yet.
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review
cordy
Thirty Girls | Susan Minot
Mehso-so

Esther Yay! Jane Nay!

review
DocBrown
Thirty Girls | Susan Minot
Mehso-so

This book was a slog. It started with accounts of several of the eponymous girls, interspersed with what at first seemed like backstory on Jane, the US journalist on assignment to cover the girls' kidnapping and (for some) subsequent escape. But the episodes focusing on Jane eventually eclipse those of her various subjects. Ultimately not as compelling reading as I was hoping for. Twist ending was jarring and seemed unconnected.

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ChrisStingray
Thirty Girls | Susan Minot
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Thirty Girls by Susan Minot
Another re-read! Love paperback editions.