Sunday, March 22, 2009

The House at Sugar Beach #5

After Daddy left, everything began to change drastically. The country people were sick of being underneath the Congo people of which Helene and her family were a part of. Helene was unaware that anything was going until the government was officially overthrown, “A coup d’etat, I learned that day, was a French phrase meaning “overthrow of the government” or literally, “cutting off the head,” (Cooper 166). This foreshadows the bloodiness and violence that will soon transcend over the country.
Because there were mostly just women at the house at Sugar Beach after daddy left, they were much more vulnerable. Soldiers came, ransacked the house, and took mommee into the bedroom. They left and she came out saying, “Those damn soldiers gang-raped me” (Cooper 177). This was extremely traumatizing for her and the girls who were forced to stand by and watch it happen. They looked up to their mother for strength and seeing her get taken advantage of drained a lot of their courage. Nobody should have to go through that.

The House at Sugar Beach #4

A shocking turn in the story was when Helene’s parents got a divorce. For years her mother had been threatening that she would leave if her father didn’t stop sleeping around but in the end, he was the one that left. While they were on vacation in the United States, Mommee received a letter from her husband saying he wanted a divorce and everyone was shocked, especially Helene. “I had a lot of faith in my ability to talk mommee into coming back to daddy if she left him. Never, not once, had I thought it would be daddy who would leave. I hadn’t practiced talking him out of leaving,” (Cooper 130). Helene is so young and naive and didn’t deserve to go through that.
I normally think of divorce as an ugly American custom and it never even really occurred to me that it might be happening in Africa. This hit the Cooper family really hard and everyone was extremely distraught. There are so many wars and terrible things going on over there. It is tragic to think that even young children if Africa have to deal with it on top of all the other cultural struggles going on around them.

The House at Sugar Beach #3

Helene and her family still celebrate Christmas but theirs is so incredibly different than the Christmas we are accustomed to. When Helene and Eunice hear the drums that represent the arrival of Santa Claus, they jump out of their seats and run to greet him. The description of their him is nothing I would ever expect, “Santa Claus, on stilts and wearing a grass skirt, a wooden mask with eye holes, and long blond hair, loped into the yard, he was surrounded by three drummers,” (Cooper 108). Not quite the jolly, fat, candy cane colored man most people affiliate with this holiday. Even though the specifics are different the principles are actually relatively similar. All of the people there join in singing, “We-ah we-ah, Santa Claus we-ah, aye, We-ah we-ah, Santa Claus we-ah aye,” (Cooper 109). The song is different, but the custom of singing Christmas carols is the same.
Shortly after Christmas, Helene receives another exciting visit. Her father invites a few of his friends over for a drink and Helene makes it her mission for them to accept her. As they walk into the parlor she grabs her father’s Newsweek and pretends to be reading it. She lets the men talk for awhile then decides to make her official entrance into the conversation. She ends up confusing the subject and saying something completely foolish. The men laugh and laugh but she does not care one bit because he dad repeatedly says that’s my daughter! His approval is all she needs.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

The House at Sugar Beach #2

The more I read into this book the more interesting it becomes. At first the idea of having her own room had drawn Helene to the Sugar Beach house but after moving in, she realized that maybe that wasn’t the best thing for her. The seclusion from society at Sugar Beach made their house very prone to being burglarized. Within the first few nights of them being there, many of their possessions were stolen including an ivory tusk and her mother’s favorite painting. On the fourth night as Helene lay in bed “heartmen” snuck into her room; “Heartmen are witch doctors who kidnap people and cut out their hearts while they’re still alive to make medicine” (Cooper 24). Luckily she was able to scare them off be screaming but after that incident her parents decided to get her a “live-in friend”. The girls name was Eunice and she was a Bassa girl. Bassas were another tribe that resided in Liberia and young Bassa children were often sent to live with Congo people in order to receive better care and a better education.
At first Eunice and Helene don’t hit it off very well. Eunice runs away three times before she finally becomes comfortable in the house. She begins to bond with Marlene, Helene’s younger sister, until she and Helene solve their differences. After they talk Helene moves into the room with Marlene and Eunice and they become very close. This is a turning point for Helene because she is learning how to interact and reach out to other people. Before Helene tried to act like she didn’t care at all and putting down that front is a big step.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

The House at Sugar Beach

For my quarter three outside reading assignment I chose to read The House at Sugar Beach by Helene Cooper off of the New York Times “100 Notable Books of 2008”. The book is a memoir written about Helene’s childhood as a privileged member of the Congo society in Liberia. Her ancestors were some of the first freed slaves to come back to Africa from the US in the early 1800’s. This enables them to be a part of the upper class in Africa. When people think of Africa they often picture wild people in the bushes but her situation was very different. They had cars, three houses, a generous staff, expensive schooling, and much more.
The book starts with Helene and her family moving from their house in the city to their new custom built house on Sugar Beach. Just the upper level had, “five bedrooms and three bathrooms and a TV lounge and an indoor balcony that looked down onto the children’s toy room on the first floor” (Cooper 9). The first floor had two more bedrooms, three more bathrooms, a music room, recreations room, dining room, living room and more. This shows the wealth that Helene was surrounded by all throughout her childhood. Its really eye-opening to see the other side of Africa. I am so used to hearing of the wars and brutalities over there that this is refreshing.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

A Million Little Pieces #6

The final test in, A Million Little Pieces, is when James Frey, a twenty three year old man walks into a bar with his brother, a friend, and forty dollars, to prove once and for all that he can stop being the addict and alcoholic he has been categorized as for so many years. He orders a tall glass of whisky and sits at the counter alone, smelling, looking touching, the alcohol but not drinking it. The final moment is when James creeps his head up towards the mirror and finally looks himself in the eye which is something he has been struggling to do for the entire book;

For the first time in my life, as I look into my own eyes, I like what I see. I can live with it. I want to live with it. For a long time. I want to live with it. I want to live” (429).

James has come such a long way in the short span of his book but he has finally begun to shape himself into the kind of man he wants to be. He has a yes or no decision to make. Drink. Don’t Drink. Just like that he gets up from the bar and walks over to the pool table and plays a round with his brother. At the end of the book there is a list of what happened to some of the more important characters later on in life and it is sad to see that very few continue one the safe journey to recovery. The strength needed to overcome the kind of addiction James had is unbelievable and truly amazing.

A Million Little Pieces #5

One of the more intense scenes in, A Million Little Pieces, is when Lily and James are caught together and Lily leaves the rehab center after being told they will not be able to see each other again. When James asks Lincoln where Lily is he tells him, “We know what we’re doing here. We have rules for a reason. Maybe you’ll listen a bit better from now on” (345). James is infuriated and knows that he can help Lily and wants to go after her. Hank takes James along with Lincoln on a search for Lily. When James finds out where she is, he immediately runs into the crack house to rescue her without a second thought. The entire time the question of if he will be able to withstand the powerful drug is bouncing around in your mind. When he walks in to find Lily selling her body for drugs, he orders the man out of the room and turns to Lily, “She crawls into the corner, clutching her gear. She shakes her head. We’re going to leave that shit here and we’re going home. She clutches, shakes her head, her eyes are gone, she is gone” (355). I can’t imagine the effect these drugs have on people I just know that it is something I hope I am never forced to deal with, especially with someone I love.

As James sits in the corner clutching Lily;
There is a burst of anger and fear and punching and pushing and she stops. Goes limp. I feel the pipe and bag against my chest. I feel them fall away, hear them hit the floor. I think about picking them up the urge is so f***ing strong I hold on to her. I hold on until it goes away. Hold on. (355)
This is the first instance where James fights his urges using not the rehab way but his own determination and love for Lily. He puts her ahead of him and is therefore able to get them both out of there unharmed. Although it is a miracle that he was able to resist the drug, one questions what may happen when Lily isn’t there to take his mind away.