Thứ Sáu, 26 tháng 10, 2018

News on Youtube Oct 26 2018

Hey everyone, welcome back to the Waterstones vlog; it is Will here. So Milkman won the

Man Booker Prize in the end. Did you pick it? I haven't read it, so I don't know but

congratulations to Anna Burns. Huge congratulations to her, congratulations to

you if you picked it as a winner. If you have read the book I'd love to know

what you thought of it so do leave comments below. But I'm going to be

talking about another book that was on the shortlist this year which is this

one here, Washington Black by Esi Edugyan which I read just before the Man Booker Prize

announcement happened and it's a shame it didn't win because it's an absolutely fantastic

book, but I wouldn't envy any of the judges on that prize trying to pick a

winner from those six shortlisted books. I have read Esi's previous novel, Half

Blood Blues and absolutely loved it so I was always looking forward to this book.

It's actually the kind of book I guess I don't read an awful lot of, which is

historical fiction because for various reasons I'm not a massive fan, but she's

a fantastic writer and she did not disappoint with Washington Black. I did

actually get the chance to speak to her about the book and if you haven't seen

the interview already if you're watching on YouTube a link will have popped up

around my head somewhere, if you're watching it elsewhere we'll probably put

a link together with this video. She's absolutely fascinating, she's very sort

of intelligent but also calm and sort of humane and really thoughtful. And we had

a really good chat about a lot of the themes that come up in the book and I'll

talk about a few of those today. So what is this book about? Well it's about a

chap called Washington Black, George Washington Black is a sort of 11 year

old slave boy on a plantation in Barbados and at the beginning of the

novel we are thrown straight into the life of the slaves on this plantation. We

see how awful their life is frankly and we see him being sort of looked after

and cared for by a woman called Big Kit. She's his protector on this plantation

and very quickly he is sort of plucked almost from the fields to be an

assistant to the brother of the plantation owner, a man called Titch. And

he has various things that he's sort of into pursuing, scientific pursuits, he

seems to be building a kind of, well in fact you can see it here on the

cover; what he calls his 'cloud cutter'. And Washington turns out to be a really good

draftsman, he's really good at sketching and drawing and so that's exactly what

Titch uses him for. And that means he has this very very different relationship of

course he's always been scared of white men and then he has this man who seems

to be very caring of him and looks after him and it offers up the first of sort

of many big changes in Washington's life. And in fact I don't think it's much of a

spoiler to say that they will leave the island together,

there is an escape of sorts, and this of course is the beginning of a completely

different life for Washington Black. And the rest of the novel is concerned with

him finding his place in the world I guess.So that having had an existence on

that Island where he had no rights he was a slave and he knew exactly what he

would be doing from the day that he was born to the day he would die,

he now has these opportunities in the world. But the question I suppose of the

book is how free is he in a world where of course black men are still regarded

as less than human by much of the world in which he travels? And also of course,

having endured the trauma that he's been through in his life, is it going to be

easy for him or even possible for him to understand how to trust people, how to

love people, how to forge the kind of bonds and relationships that most of us

completely take for granted. It's filled with lots of very, very important themes:

slavery, freedom, guilt, survival; all sorts of things going on there and I guess

most crucially Washington Black is a character which is created with such

sympathy, empathy that I think it would be a very hard-hearted reader who

doesn't read this book and care about him, worry about him and sort of wish

the best for him as he goes through. He has to endure an awful lot, it's quite

difficult to read in places but that is a skill that I think Esi has, you

know, she's just so strong at creating these characters that you care about. I

remember this from Half-Blood Blue's as well.

So that's the kind of book that can really grab hold of your heart and make

you care. So there is a lot to recommend this book, it's a sort of a rich,

historical epic, he will travel to various parts of the world. But I suppose

most importantly it has this huge beating heart in the middle and a lovely

ambiguous ending as well to leave you wondering just exactly what might happen

after that final page. It's also an absolutely gorgeous book, it's got this

gold foiling on the cover, it's got these lovely green designed endpapers, it's a

really gorgeous hardback, the kind of thing that when you've got it in your

hand you will enjoy reading every minute that you read it. So there we go, that's

Washington Black by Esi Edugyan, a book that I absolutely loved and it absolutely

deserved its place on that Booker shortlist and may even have deserved to

win it, but hey, as Julian Barnes once said, it's just 'posh bingo'. That's all for

this week, I will see you in a few weeks' time, there'll be some more vlogs over

the next few weeks and keep your eyes peeled because we will, all of us, be

revealing some of our favorite books of the year.

Not sure I've quite decided what mine is yet, you'll have to tune in and see, but

until then, take care.

For more infomation >> Vlog: Washington Black by Esi Edugyan - Duration: 5:38.

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S. Korea, U.S. hold Military Committee Meeting in Washington D.C. - Duration: 0:35.

top military officials from South Korea and the United States held their annual

military committee meeting in Washington DC on Thursday local time they discussed

a number of issues including the transfer of wartime operational control

according to Seoul's Defense Ministry the chairman of the nation's Joint

Chiefs of Staff General pokken G and his American counterpart general Joseph

Dunford signed a set of agreements guaranteeing wartime OPCON transfer to

South Korea the results of the meeting will be reported at next week's security

consultative meeting between the Allies defense Chiefs that they are expected to

finalize the agreements

For more infomation >> S. Korea, U.S. hold Military Committee Meeting in Washington D.C. - Duration: 0:35.

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S. Korea, U.S. hold Military Committee Meeting in Washington D.C. - Duration: 0:35.

meanwhile top military officials from South Korea and the United States held

their annual military committee meeting in Washington DC on Thursday local time

they discussed a number of issues including the transfer of wartime

operational control according to Seoul's Defense Ministry the chairman of the

nation's Joint Chiefs of Staff General pehangi and his American counterpart

General Joseph Dunford signed a set of agreements guaranteeing wartime OPCON

transfer to South Korea the result of the meeting will be reported at next

week's security consultative meeting between the Allies defense Chiefs where

they are expected to finalize the agreement

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