"[A] beautiful and loving portrait" - The Boston Globe
"Living on the fringe" is how Robyn Scott's mother
describes the family's unconventional approach to marriage,
child-rearing, education, and housekeeping in Botswana. Mrs. Scott, an
advocate of home-schooling, believed that work and play should be
indistinguishable, that routine ruined creativity and television
stunted the imagination. Pathologically optimistic, she allowed the three children unbounded opportunities to explore, discover, and imagine. With Damien and Lulu, her younger brother and sister, oldest child Robyn grows up never knowing boredom, capable of endless invention and amusement, enthusiastic for adventure, and eager to be thrilled. It is no surprise that all three children grow up to be interesting adults, but it is a surprise that they bear no ill will toward their parents - no shame, embarrassment, or longing for the ease of conformity. Robyn
concludes her beautiful and loving portrait of her parents thus: "What
they'd really loved was . . . changing countries, building houses,
living in cowsheds, laughing at convention, and believing passionately
in doing what everyone said couldn't and shouldn't be done." |

