Synopsis
This second part of Alan Paton's autobiography begins in 1948, the year of publication of his best-selling book "Cry, the Beloved Country" and the rise to power of the Afrikaner Nationalists, whose oppressive and racist policies Paton was to fight as a writer, leader of the Liberal Party and devoted Christian. The book continues to focus on Paton's literary and political life. He tells of the success of "Cry, the Beloved Country", including the making of a musical and film based on it; his subsequent writing, including biographies of J.H.Hofmeyer and Archbishop Geoffrey Clayton, and the novel "Ah, But Your Land is Beautiful". His involvement with the controversial Liberal Party, which he led during the stormy time of the Sharpeville massacre and afterwards, is remembered, as is a visit to the USA in the last days of McCarthyism and legal segregation, and acquaintances including Nelson Mandela, Trevor Huddleston, Patrick Duncan, Robert Sobukwe and Chief Albert Lutuli. The story ends in 1968, when the Liberal Party disbanded to avoid obeying the government's order to separate into racial parties, but an epilogue brings the reader up to the present day. The first part of the autobiography is "Towards the Mountain", (OUP, 1981).
From Publishers Weekly
In this sequel to Towards the Mountain , South African writer Paton describes the Sharpeville massacre of 1960 in which 69 protesters were killed, many shot in the back. But Paton, who died last April, concludes that H. F. Verwoerd, architect of apartheid, was not an evil man, merely arrogant and self-deluded. This straightforward memoir by the author of Cry, the Beloved Country starts in 1948 with the Afrikan Nationalist Party's seizure of power. Chronicling government harassment, torture and the passage of racial laws, Paton follows the Nationalists' tightening death-grip on a country "living on the slopes of a volcano." He writes in detail about the Liberal Party, of which he was founder and leader, defending it against critics who charge that it weakened the true opposition. Paton's testimony at the 1964 trial of Nelson Mandela, and his account of the Treason Trial (1956-61) in which hundreds of dissenters were arrested, are high points in this reenactment of his public life.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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