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Keywords: Kenya, Mau Mau, anti-colonial struggle

Global Regions: Africa

Countries: Kenya



Subjects: History and Social Studies, Language Arts & Literature

Resource Types: Book Awards

Time Periods: Modern

Themes: Culture and Society, Imperialism and Colonialism, Multiculturalism

Levels: Middle School (6-8)

 

The Mzungu Boy

By Meja Mwangi (Toronto & Berkeley: Groundwood Books / House of Anansi Press, 2005)

A Children's Africana Book Award Winner:

Best Book for Older Readers

ISBN 0-88899-664-0

160 pages

An award-winning novelist, film writer, and director, Meja Mwangi was born in Nanyuki, Kenya, in 1948 and grew up under British colonial rule in the tumultuous 1950s.

"For young Kariuki, life in a small village in central Kenya is one great adventure. And when he meets Nigel life becomes even more interesting. Nigel is from England and he has come to visit his great grandfather, the fearsome Bwana Ruin who owns the farm where all the villagers work. The villagers call Nigel the mzungu boy, and they view him with suspicion and fear. Nevertheless, Kariuki becomes friends with Nigel and the two spend happy days exploring the forest together. Then one day the two boys decide to hunt down Old Moses, the biggest, ugliest, oldest and meanest warthog in the forest. The hunt takes them deeper into the jungle than Kariuki has ever gone, and his beloved forest becomes a frightening place, filled with dangerous creatures, including the mau-mau, the mysterious men who have guns and are plotting against Bwana Ruin and the white soldiers. And when Nigel suddenly disappears, Kariuki realizes that it is up to him to save his friend. Meja Mwangi's novel captures a child's-eye view of village life in Kenya in the late 1950s—a time of innocence, wild beauty, and the growing violence that would change the entire structure of colonial Africa." — Groundwood Books

 

Recommended by: African Studies Association

Length: 160 pages

Year Produced: 2005

Material: Award-winning book

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