It takes the average reader 2 hours and 23 minutes to read The Wind Still Sings Sad Songs by Farouk Asvat
Assuming a reading speed of 250 words per minute. Learn more
"The legend of poet extraordinaire Farouk Asvat: ... like vintage wine, proper poetry matures with time, and like vintage art the voice and wisdom of a poet worth the name is timeless." Mphutlane wa Bofelo, kagablog " ... a guided tour of the souls of the South Africans he writes about and cares about. ... Hauntingly universal ..." Thomas Rome, New York "The Wind Still Sings Sad Songs ... is an important addition to any discerning reader's literary collection." Victor Metsoamere, Sowetan "Like hesitating snowflakes ... his words are fascinating in their capricious wilfulness ... like unexpected strokes of a whip." Susanne Baackmann, University Of Albuquerque, USA "Farouk Asvat ... writes about love and suffering, about individualism, snobbishness, pretence and pride, about human and environmental beauty and about opposing oppression, and who deploys metaphysical, lyrical and colloquial language, slang and standard diction, all with equal strength and ease." Cosmo Pieterse, Culture In Another South Africa "Since he has been in the line of fire as both a victim of Apartheid and as a political voice in the struggle for liberation, his evocation of the contemporary South African battlefield and his testimony of the humiliation, isolation, deprivation, degradation and murder, the collective weapons of Apartheid, are chillingly authentic." Herbert Steyn, English Olympiad, King Edward VII School. "His love poetry soars with an intense sensitivity, it celebrates lyrically the joys of a most exquisite sensuousness." Marcia Leveson, University Of The Witwatersrand, The Indicator ..". you almost catch your breath at some of the stanzas ... you can re-read it several times and be struck by new ideas, metaphors, elegiac surprises, and the heartfelt poignancy ..." Aggrey Klaaste, editor Sowetan "Out of an angry silence, a polished poet is born." Anton Harber, editor Weekly Mail "This anthology contains some of the finest political poems published in the past two decades ...." Heather Mackie, Business Day ..". a love imagery entwined with pain, blood and violence ..." Josefa Salmon, Loyola University, USA "A common feature of the volume is the mingling of internal and external reality into internal psychological disturbance." Duncan Brown, English Academy Review ..". Farouk Asvat regards the honed word as a means of interrogating the slogans and dreams of the revolution." Michael Chapman, Southern African Review " ... carries conviction and conveys a mounting tension which can be glancingly lyrical and simultaneously politically authoritative." Peter Wilhelm, Financial Mail "Asvat's distrust of rhetorical formulas produces a language that is capable of interrogating the dreams and slogans of the revolution." Julia Martin, Upstream ..". ringing celebrations and criticisms of recent political events ... this collection is an important addition to South African poetry." Francis Faller, Johannesburg College of Education, Tribute "Poetry is not viewed primarily as an art form, but rather as the vital expression of a people struggling to voice its soul ..." Phyllis Bischof, University of California, Berkeley "He conveys a vivid sense of the country's agony, of the brutalization of all those involved in political conflict." Amrit Manga, New Nation "Here is the poetry which in its very contradictions explores accurately the emotional terrain and tensions of life in the townships today." Kelwyn Sole, University Of Cape Town, Staffrider ..". one of the most prolific - and controversial - South African poets " Jon Qwelane, editor Sunday Star "A Celebration of Flames is so near to the bone, so full of despair and sanity. There is such gentleness and sadness in the love poetry ..." Debbie Arends, University Of Witwatersrand "Asvat ... explores ... the turbulence and fragility of life under apartheid and the sustaining power of love in these times." Andrew Martin, National English Literary Museum News
The Wind Still Sings Sad Songs by Farouk Asvat is 142 pages long, and a total of 35,784 words.
This makes it 48% the length of the average book. It also has 44% more words than the average book.
The average oral reading speed is 183 words per minute. This means it takes 3 hours and 15 minutes to read The Wind Still Sings Sad Songs aloud.
The Wind Still Sings Sad Songs is suitable for students ages 10 and up.
Note that there may be other factors that effect this rating besides length that are not factored in on this page. This may include things like complex language or sensitive topics not suitable for students of certain ages.
When deciding what to show young students always use your best judgement and consult a professional.
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