What Is the What

Dave Eggers

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Summary

What Is the What

By: Dave Eggers

Narrarated by: Dion Graham

Copyright © 2006 by Dave Eggers. All rights reserved. Copyright 2007 by BBC Audiobooks America. All rights reserved. Copyright exists on all recordings issued by BBC Audiobooks America. Any unauthorized broadcasting, public performance, copying or re-recording of such recordings in any manner whatsoever, will constitute an infringement of such copyright.

In a heartrending and astonishing novel, Dave Eggers illuminates the history of the civil war in Sudan through the eyes of Valentino Achak Deng, a refugee now living in the United States. We follow his life as he's driven from his home as a boy and walks, with thousands of orphans, to Ethiopia, where he finds safety — for a time. Valentino's travels, truly Biblical in scope, bring him in contact with government soldiers, janjaweed-like militias, liberation rebels, hyenas and lions, disease and starvation — and a string of unexpected romances. Ultimately, Valentino finds safety in Kenya and, just after the millennium, is finally resettled in the United States, from where this novel is narrated. In this book, written with expansive humanity and surprising humor, we come to understand the nature of the conflicts in Sudan, the refugee experience in America, the dreams of the Dinka people, and the challenge one indomitable man faces in a world collapsing around him.

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Audiobook Information
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  • Edition: Unabridged
  • Author: Dave Eggers (See All Books)
  • Date Released: Jul 7, 2008
  • Publisher: AudioGO
  • Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Fiction & Literature

Total File Size: 563 MB (17 files) Total Length: 20 Hours, 28 Minutes

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07.07.08
Dave Eggers, What Is the What
2008 | Label: AudioGO

Dave Eggers helps to put a human face on a tragedy that too often appears immense but remote.
Billed both as a novel and an autobiography, What Is the What was written by Dave Eggers, but its author is Valentino Achak Deng, whose journey from southern Sudan through Ethiopia and Kenya to Atlanta, Georgia is chronicled within its pages. The story begins in the 1980s, just before the first ripples of civil war reach the village of Marial Bai. The horrors that follow are at times unimaginable, but never sensational. Even when he is writing in the back of a truck filled with corpses, Valentino is reminded that the stench of genocide is “a human smell.”

Eggers frames Valentino’s decades-long trek to safety with snapshots from his new life in America, which also proves far from peaceful. In the first scene, Valentino is pistol-whipped and robbed in his apartment, and later sits for hours in a hospital waiting room. Sudan, he makes clear, does not have a monopoly on inhumanity.

Writing in what the preface calls “an approximation” of its protagonist’s voice, the book is framed as often as possible as a series of monologues addressed to audiences real and imagined. Reader Dion Graham captures the poetic lilt of Valentino’s voice, as well as his conversational informality. Even when he is describing watching his friends being eaten by lions, the telling is tinged with bitter humor. Such stories, he says, are common currency among Sudanese refugees since they inflame Western sympathies; he sounds almost abashed that the cliché is, in his case, true. Epic in scope but intimate in its appeal, What Is the What puts a human face on a tragedy that too often appears immense but remote, and fulfills its author’s claim that storytelling itself is an act of political struggle.

Copyright © 2006 by Dave Eggers. All rights reserved. Copyright 2007 by BBC Audiobooks America. All rights reserved. Copyright exists on all recordings issued by BBC Audiobooks America. Any unauthorized broadcasting, public performance, copying or re-recording of such recordings in any manner whatsoever, will constitute an infringement of such copyright.

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Maybe you should read it

dp24344

This to me seems like a book you should read. It's an incredibly powerful story, and the writing and narrative is top notch. At 20 hours on Audiobook, it'll take you just as long to read it.

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Brilliant!

aVerySmartMan

Saw Val speak at the Ali Center in Louisville, Kentucky last summer with a few of the other Lost Boys of Sudan. Made me love this book even more! Beautiful! Check out the band Interstates on eMusic. They have a song called "Sudan". It's a great accompaniment to the book.

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