Posted by Unknown
on Wednesday, 20 July 2016
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In a poetic, yet detatched way, Maya Angelou captures the heart of her
struggles growing up female and Black during the Depression. Her style
and description draw in the reader and keep her spellbound even during
the most painful scenes. You feel deeply for the author and her little
brother as they drift through their lives living for a bit of affection.
Neglected by their divorced parents, Maya and her brother get sent to
Arkansas at ages 4 and 5 to live with their grandma and handicapped
uncle. Although life is hard and love not demonstrated, Maya learns much
from her grandma and uncle.
The theme of this book is the quest for
the child to be loved by the adult. Maya feels inferior. She feels ugly
and compares herself to her magical brother Bailey. Both children are
starved for true affection and daydream a white movie actress on the
screen is their long lost mother.
Maya and her brother are eventually
united with "Mother Dear" in St.Louis when she is eight. Unfortunately
Mother's boyfriend begins to abuse Maya(...). This is graphically
portrayed in the book. Maya's feelings of not belonging and not being
truly loved are compounded after the abuse.
I admire all the
autobiographical books by Ms.Angelou. She has achieved a lot in her life
for a person who started out in such a sad situation.