"A colorful, occasionally shocking fish-out-of-water memoir." Kirkus Reviews
Vigorous recollections of a youth spent among “profoundly fringy” adults “in the middle of nowhere.” Scott
moved with her idiosyncratic parents from New Zealand to Botswana in
1987, when she was almost seven years old. In minute detail, she
sketches the landscape, the people she encountered and the innumerable
problems that beset her family. She paints her wanderlust-stricken
parents as singular human beings with a deep desire to avoid mundanity
at any cost. Her father was “an accidental doctor”: Cape Town
University in his native South Africa didn’t offer courses in his
preferred field, veterinary medicine, so he had to settle for
ministering to human beings. His wife, who grew up in Botswana, shared
his belief in alternative medicine and home schooling. Together they
roved from London to Cape Town to Auckland before settling with their
three children in Botswana. Right next door was inimitable Grandpa
Ivor, a World War II veteran of the South African Air Force, pressed
into service to fly his son to the area’s remote bush clinics until Dad
got a pilot’s license. Granny Joan and Grandpa Terry, Mum’s parents,
also played key roles in the author’s life. Following some brief
passages explaining her parents’ globetrotting exploits, Scott
unleashes astonishing stories about her Botswana childhood: Their first
residence was a dilapidated cowshed; the cow died from eating plastic
bags; her dad sometimes drank his own urine, etc. After the family
moved to their own farm in the early ’90s, home schooling gave way to a
conventional education, which the author describes as “boring.” (It
would be, compared to her family.) The book’s most moving passages
delineate her tireless father’s heroic adventures as an ill-equipped
doctor. They range from an extraordinary tale about a man who somehow
inserted a ten-centimeter-long snake’s tail into his penis to accounts
of the author’s mercurial, ceaselessly inventive work with AIDS
patients. A colorful, occasionally shocking fish-out-of-water memoir. Kirkus Reviews, February 2008 |