Last week Kaye George gave us
an insider’s glimpse into the world of Mormonism with her review of the mystery
the Ties That Bind by Natalie R.
Collins. This week “Monday With Kaye” takes us to the world of the Belgian Congo
via author Tamar Myers. The mystery titled The
Girl Who Married an Eagle is based on events in the author’s life.
“The Girl Who Married an
Eagle” by Tamar Myers
This is a delightful book, a chance for a glimpse into the Belgian Congo, when it was still called that. The cover
says this book is a mystery, although it’s a mystery to me why that label is
there. Be sure
and read the Acknowledgments before diving in. There’s a family story that gives background. Next is the Preface, which puts the reader deep inside the Bashilele tribe and introduces us to Buakane, a member of the tribe.
and read the Acknowledgments before diving in. There’s a family story that gives background. Next is the Preface, which puts the reader deep inside the Bashilele tribe and introduces us to Buakane, a member of the tribe.
The story starts in 1959, a year before the country gained
independence from Belgium
and became the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, as it’s known today.
Buakane’s beauty is her burden; it has attracted the attention of Chief Eagle.
The chief, not a young man by the tribe’s standards, is on the lookout for his
twenty-third wife. When Buakane is betrothed to him, the vivid image of her
future—being buried alive with him when he dies, after her arms and legs are
broken—prompts her to take rash action.
Chapter One takes us to Oxford, Ohio, where the young, impressionable, idealistic Julia
Newton is bewitched by a traveling missionary who convinces her that her
college degree can be used for the Lord’s work in the Belgian
Congo. Even though the tribe is made up of former headhunters, who
practice both polygamy and polyandry, and the school consists of young brides
who have run away from their older husbands, and conditions in the mission are
primitive, Julia decides, on the spot, she will go to Africa.
The American who greets her and takes her to the mission, Hank,
is so good-looking he threatens her Christian goals. She tries to ignore her
attraction and get on with the business of saving souls.
The history is woven into the storylines unobtrusively as Julia
regrets her decision many times after she arrives. But adventures with the
other missionaries, the living conditions, and the tribe, and those of Buakane,
make for a great read.
Reviewed by Kaye George, author
of Eine
Kleine Murder for Suspense Magazine
2 comments:
Sounds like a good story, Kaye, and a good way to learn about a different culture without leaving home.
You're right, Earl. I was very taken with this book.
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