Woman At Point Zero
If anyone still bothers to read this, I’d like to apologise for my general lack of posting last week, mainly due to laziness/the winter blues/time spent sitting around and moping. Enough is enough! Pick yourself up traveller, give yourself a dust off, and get back on the road. Louise Bagshawe has been a literary version of
I found Woman At Point Zero an interesting contrast to recent works I’ve read; both The Blinding Absence of Light and So Long A Letter were about confinement and restriction and punishment, and all three are from different parts of Africa with different cultures, albeit a shared religion in the form of Islam. All three books have been exceptional reads, and reading books which take such similar central themes yet take those themes in such different directions has encouraged me to think a lot about the world we live in. Sounds corny, I know, but there is always a new perspective to consider, always a new take on an old situation, and there is always some kind of relevance to our lives or our own society if you choose to see it. And I think I’m still young enough to be a bit naïve about the world!
1 comment:
Hey, I'm permanently erratic about posts, no matter how hard I try to keep up!
El Saadawi is a really interesting writer (although I confess I haven't read this yet - in my TBR pile!), she has written a wide range of both fiction and non-fiction, most focusing on lives of women.
Thanks for sharing your experience of reading her. Amazing how books sometimes complement each other without planning it that way.
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