Fiela's Child (New Longman Literature 14-18) | 
| Authors: Dalene Matthee, Roy Blatchford, Cathy Poole Publisher: Longman Category: Book
List Price: £7.50 Buy New: £6.89 You Save: £0.61 (8%)
New (21) Used (4) from £4.27
Avg. Customer Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 123207
Media: Paperback Pages: 408 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0582287324 Dewey Decimal Number: 809 EAN: 9780582287327 ASIN: 0582287324
Publication Date: September 27, 1996 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Customer Reviews:
Poignant and beautiful description of a mother's love May 13, 1999 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I originally read this book in the Afrikaans version for last year of school syllabus in South Africa. Classes in Afrikaans were not always enjoyed, but I felt very moved by this story. It gives beautiful descriptions of the South African countryside. The injustices of the old colour bar are also felt when the boy is taken from a loving mother, who is coloured and put with a family that can show no love just because they are white. I wanted another copy in Afrikaans, but would like to see if the book translates well into English
Heart wrenching scenes and some that make your veins boil! September 16, 1998 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
It is a book that brings back the disharmony and racialistic view of the Whites aginst the Coloureds. And in this point of view we see the struggle of a Coloured mother protecting the safety and haven of her White child like a tigeress over her cub. This is a book about romance, about the individual hearts and philosophies; it is also about greed and chauvinism, yet most importantly Fiela's Child is centered and wrapped in but one word - love. The love of Benjamin over Fiela and Nina, Elias' love over money, the love of Nina towards nature and many more. Those who are sentimentalists and with a touch of feminism in them, you will experience a world so real and yet with such illuminated beauty.
Great Book! May 6, 1998 3 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is one of the three books that I had to study for during my O-levels two years ago. I think that this book is absolutely fabulous with many heart wrenching parts, for example when Benjamin is taken away from Fiela and her loving family and given to the cruel Elias or when Benjamin finally gets the truth out from Barta the he is indeed not her son. The author also beautifully describes the feelings of the different characters, like the guilt that Benjamin felt when he realises that he loves his "sister" Nina in a romantic way. A must read for everyone!
A great book September 12, 1997 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Dalene Matthee has long been regarded as one of the masters of the (Afrikaans) Romantic Novel. When we were given Fiela se Kind (English translation: Fiela's Child) as a setwork, I like most students viewed the book with trepidation. After 10 pages, I went and bought myself a copy of the book. This is the story of a white baby, abandoned by his natural parents, who is found and 'adopted' by a Coloured woman (Fiela), who raises the child, Benjamin, as her own. It explores the joys of Benjamin's childhood, the education that he gets from Fiela (so very different to what he would have got in a white household), and eventually the heartbreak when he is torn away from the only mother he has, and is given to a white wood cutter, who claims that Benjamin is his child who went missing in the forest. This is a story told with a great sensitivity of the life styles of the people who inhabited the Cape in the mid 1800's. It is a compelling book, heartwrenching at times, humerous at times, but always, it gives the reader a feel for what was happening in the hearts of the people involved. The Characters may come across as being very simple, but that is the essence of the book. Fiela's simple, but pure, love for her child, the woodcutter's simple, but hard way of life, and Benjamin's simple non-understanding of why he was taken away from the woman he loved, and given to a man he hated. His lack of understanding that he is "better" than Fiela because he is white, and she isn't, and his stuggle to adjust to a new and totally unfamiliar set of rules. This book could be described a bit like a prison, because once it gets hold of you, it doesn't let go, not until it has finished with you, and not you with it.
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