Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - Dale Norton
Haley, Alex (Vol. 12) - Dale Norton
DALE NORTON
[Roots] symbolizes the connection of black Americans—and, by association, all Americans—to Africa itself. Roots is part of the growing body of literature helping to rediscover the heritage of black Americans which has been outlawed, ignored, or forgotten over the generations. (p. xliii)
As literature the work has faults, but none which over-shadow the rightness of its general conception or the triumph of Haley's imagination.
The first half of the book focuses on the life of the African Kunta Kinte and is clearly its most successful part. The dignity of Kunta's family and the soundness of the village culture are thoroughly convincing…. Statistics and drawings of slave ships in no way prepare one for the overpowering vividness of the voyage episodes. Equally moving are Kunta's struggles to escape and to salvage his manhood during the first agonizing years of slavery when he cannot communicate even with his fellow slaves....
[The entire page is 587 words long]
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