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Teen Fiction, Children - Fiction & Literature, Fiction Subjects, Fiction - People, Places & Cultures
Somehow Tenderness Survives by Hazel Rochman β€” book cover

Somehow Tenderness Survives

by Hazel Rochman
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Overview

Apartheid. It's about suffering, about violence. Here are ten stories and autobiographical accounts, by southern African writers of various races. Some of the writers β€” Nadine Gordimer, Mark Mathabane, Doris Lessing β€” are well-known; all of them deserve to be. Their stories, individually and as a group, create a moving, sometimes shockingly vivid portrait of what it feels like to grow up in a land where racism is the law."A stunning group of [ten] stories and autobiographical accounts [by such authors as Doris Lessing and Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer] which vividly evoke what it means to come of age in South Africa under apartheid. Whether a portrayal of a major event in a character's life, or a simple recounting of the small details of everyday living, each story makes a powerful impact [and] will remain in the mind of the reader. This title should be in every YA collection." β€”V.

1988 Best Books for Young Adults (ALA)
1989 Books for the Teen Age (NY Public Library)

A collection of ten short stories and autobiographical accounts by authors of various races expose the conditions of racism in South Africa.

About the Author, Hazel Rochman

Author Bio
Hazel Rochman is an assistant editor at ALA Booklist, where she reviews books for children and young adults. Her previous book for HarperCollins, Somehow Tenderness Survives: Stories of Southern Africa, was listed as a 1988 Best Book for Young Adults (ALA) and as a 1989 Book for the Teen Age (NY Public Library). Darlene Z. Campbell is an English teacher at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools. Both Ms. Campbell and Ms. Rochman live in Chicago.

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Book Details

Published
September 1, 1988
Publisher
New York : Harper & Row, c1988.
Pages
160
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780060250232

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