Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Clemantine Wamariya

    Clemantine Wamariya is a storyteller and human rights advocate. Her work explores themes of identity, displacement, and the search for home, drawing deeply from personal experience. Wamariya examines the complexities of human resilience and the power of narrative to make sense of the world and oneself. Her style is insightful and evocative, touching on universal human desires for connection and belonging.

    The girl who smiled beads
    • 2018

      The girl who smiled beads

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading
      4.2(1825)Add rating

      A riveting tale of dislocation, survival, and the power of stories to break or save us Clemantine Wamariya was six years old when her mother and father began to speak in whispers, when neighbours began to disappear, and when she heard the loud, ugly sounds her brother said were thunder. In 1994, she and her fifteen-year-old sister, Clare, fled the Rwandan massacre and spent the next six years wandering through seven African countries, searching for safety-perpetually hungry, imprisoned and abused, enduring and escaping refugee camps, finding unexpected kindness, witnessing inhuman cruelty. They did not know whether their parents were dead or alive. When Clemantine was twelve, she and her sister were granted refugee status in the United States, where she embarked on another journey, ultimately graduating from Yale. Yet the years of being treated as less than human, of going hungry and seeing death, could not be erased. She felt at the same time six years old and one hundred years old. In The Girl Who Smiled Beads, Clemantine provokes us to look beyond the label of 'victim' and recognize the power of the imagination to transcend even the most profound injuries and aftershocks. Devastating yet beautiful, and bracingly original, it is a powerful testament to her commitment to constructing a life on her own terms.

      The girl who smiled beads