BrownGirl Speaks
  • Home
  • Journal
  • Books
  • Community
  • About Me
  • Contact Me
The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears by Dinaw Mengestu 10/11/2010
3 Comments
 
Picture
Dinaw Mengestu's 2007 debut novel, The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears gives a thoughtful yet, melancholic look at the isolated life of an Ethiopian immigrant running a fledgling neighborhood grocery in D.C. Sepha Stephanos fled Ethiopia nearly twenty years prior to escape the Ethiopian revolution. He struggles with his ceaseless desire to return to his home country and his indifferent existence in America. His rundown store also serves as meeting place for him and two fellow African immigrants who pass the time naming coups and dictators of the various African nations. Things appear to be on an upswing as his neighborhood is in the beginnings of gentrification. The first home to be renovated, which he describes as "a beautiful, tragic wreck of a building," is purchased by Judith, a white woman who's an academic and has a biracial 11 year old daughter. Sepha and Judith engage in this awkward flirtation while he forms a bond with her daughter as they read Dostoevsky in his store.  Even his budding friendship with Judith's daughter falls into a formulaic routine. Sepha's observations of the lunchtime crowd in and around his neighborhood make their daily routine appear as monotonous as his. His fellow immigrant friends have similarly vacant existences. One is stuck waiting tables as they all once did in the same hotel all those years later and the other has "made it" as a well paid engineer but even he cannot let go of his past and works constantly to ignore his present. None of them are really present in their current lives in America. Mengestu often uses the word "beautiful" to describe things that are not necessarily so as Sepha does to appease his friend about a newly acquired used Saab which is anything but beautiful. To the friend, it was his; he earned the money to buy it and that made it beautiful. As the title suggests, which comes from a line in Dante's Inferno, Sepha will eventually emerge from his own hell and discover the beautiful things that heaven bears. While it has spots that lull, there are also spots that are moving and spots that are heartbreaking. Mengestu's novel is very quiet and subtle in its approach and I actually enjoyed that. This was a strong debut from a skillful writer. I'm e that he's a voice for my generation.


Challenges
POC Reading
African Diaspora


 


Comments

Kinna link
10/11/2010 11:42am

I can't believe that I'm yet to read a book by this author. Well, your review has spurred me on. I'm looking forward to it because that unceasing yearning for home can wreck a life. Also, the Ethiopian community in the US are among the most vibrant of the African communities. Thanks for the review.

Reply
S. Krishna link
10/13/2010 8:30am

This sounds like an amazing book. The Ethiopian community here in DC is quite large, and I'd love to read a book about them. I'm definitely adding this one to my wishlist, thanks for telling me about it!

Reply
J.T. Oldfield link
10/21/2010 12:24pm

Hey! Guess what? The November Novella Challenge is back! I hope you'll join us again this year!

http://novembernovellachallenge.blogspot.com/

Reply

Comments are closed.
    Authors and publishers feel free to check out my review policy and contact me  regarding review requests.
    The Book Depository
    Picture

    My Amazon.com Wish List

    Picture

    Archives

    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010
    May 2010
    April 2010
    March 2010
    February 2010
    January 2010
    December 2009
    November 2009
    October 2009
    September 2009
    August 2009
    July 2009

    Categories

    All
    African Diaspora
    And The Word Was Spoken
    Asian Authors
    Author Interviews
    Banned Books
    Blog Tours
    Book Reviews
    Book Tours
    Bookish
    Challenges
    Diversity Roll Call
    Giveaways
    Guest Post
    Kid Lit
    Latino Authors
    Native American Authors
    Nonfiction
    Quirky Brown
    Reading Africa
    The Box Is Hot
    Women Writers
    Writing
    Ya Fiction


    Picture
    Sign Up
    Suggestion List
    First Quarter Reviews
    Second Quarter Reviews
    Third Quarter Reviews
    Read 17/12

    Picture
    Read 5/54
    Picture
    Read 5/8
    Read 2/5
    Picture
    Read 1/4
    2010 Social Justice Reading Challenge
    Read 0/12
    Picture
    Read 1/7
    Read 26/25

    Book Blogs

    A Striped Armchair
    Authors In Color
    Black Eyed Susans
    Book Blab
    Book On the Train
    Brown Paper
    Color Online
    For the Love of Books
    In Spring It Is The Dawn
    Kinna Reads
    Lotus Reads
    Love of Literature
    Notorious Spinks Talks
    Page247
    Reading In Color
    Reads4Pleasure
    Rhapsody In Books
    The Brown Bookshelf
    The Feminist Texican [Reads]
    The Happy Nappy Bookseller
    With Extra Pulp
    Worducopia

    Authors

    Chimamanda Adichie
    Carleen Brice
    Fledgling
    Junot Diaz
    Jude Dibia
    Petina Gappah
    Tayari Jones
    Jhumpa Lahiri
    Bernice McFadden
    Nnedi's Wahala Zone
    Sonia Sanchez
    Lori L. Tharps
    Alice Walker
    White Readers Meet Black Authors
    Saul Williams
    Jacqueline Woodson
    Read the Printed Word!

    Literary Reviews

    Arts & Letters Daily
    Belletrista
    Mythium Literary Magazine
    NPR Books
    NYT Book Review

    Culture

    The Black Culture Blog
    My American Melting Pot
    The Root
    Feminist Review
    Repeating Islands

    Picture

    Awards, Gotta Love 'Em!



    BrownGirl BookSpeak - Blogged
    Add to Technorati Favorites
    Books Blogs - Blog Catalog Blog Directory

    Blogs Her Color Button


    Top 21 Book Sites






    BBG Button


    indiebound



    Picture

© BrownGirl Speaks 2009 - 2011