The Gravity of Sunlight
 

The Gravity of Sunlight

by Rosa Shand

Expatriates in Africa find themselves in morally ambiguous territory in this atmospheric tale of passion.
Prizewinning story writer Rosa Shand makes an impressive debut with a novel lushly set in the tumultuous Africa of the 1970s. Agnes is a dissatisfied wife who has come with her husband, a minister, to teach in Kampala, Uganda. The disintegration of their marriage and Agnes' ecstatic... (read more)

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Overview: Amazon Reviews

Weak, uninspired. Don't buy.
  • Rated 1 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, September 24, 2003
This book was bursting with amateurish problems that should have been removed by any good editor or omitted by any good writer. The story was tasteless and banal, like eating cream of wheat every day of your life. You could say it was rather without substance. The language, not poetic as some claim, is simply gimicky and distracting. The language pulls away from any forward movement in the novel and makes some passages painful. And I'm not somebody who dislikes language heavy work (as an example, I enjoyed Ulysses' use of language for the most part).

Praises about the love story are in total disregard of the stylistic errors and cheesy genre orientation of this fiction. This is Danielle Steel in a cheap, gimicky disguise. The characters and setting took a back seat to the heavily plot and language. There is not a reason to read this book (which I say of few books), and this is the only book I have thought of jamming into the paper shredder at work.

While reading, I threw the book across the room and refused to read past the half way mark of the book. If you buy this, consider yourself warned.
Hot & Sensitive: Romantic Tensions in African Setting
  • Rated 5 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, January 13, 2003
Beautiful and flowing. Rare. Shand is a masterful writer. She captures the universalities of tensions in marriage, yet draws vivid pictures of the disappearing mixtures of subcultures in a Uganda in turmoil a generation ago. The lessons are subtle and still relevant.
A story of many layers
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, February 17, 2002
Rosa Shand's first book is filled with simple but beautiful language, description of the physical and the emotional experience of living in Uganda during the time right before and during Idi Amin's political coup. As the story unfolds, Shand manages to very gently capture the very complicated relationships between husband and wife, wife and lover, amidst the rhythms of life in a foreign land, all which help make this a very successful debut novel.

Agnes is our narrator, and she, her husband John and their young children have moved to Uganda. John is a professor teaching at the college; Agnes teaches part-time at the lower school. Each of them is lost in their respective idealisms, and their relationship is suffering for it, as they don't seem to have an intimate connection on any real level. Agnes, who is always searching to fulfill what she feels is a lack of meaningful attachment to her husband, meets Wulf, who is also teaching at the university, and is a friend of her husband's, they embark on a tentative relationship.

What works about this novel, is that this affair, in all its various stages and with all its various consequences, is written in a way that echoes the lifestyle and the political uncertainties of the country. Shand weaves Agnes' story with an intimate look at a society very different from Agnes'and our own, and these dual storylines are revealed piece by piece to the reader as the circumstances of Agnes' daily life allows. She uses deceptively simple language to tell a story of many layers, each one as lush and as precarious as the next. A fine book to curl up with on a wintry weekend, which is about how long it will take to read.

Bask in this 'Sunlight'
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, September 12, 2000
This is simply a beautiful book with well developed characters, scene setting that makes you want to hop a jet to Africa, real emotion, and a wonderful story of love and longing, betrayal, adventure and everyday life. I love this book! With apologies to Barbara Kingsolver, it's similar in that it's set in Africa, it's about a minster, his wife and their children and their time in that strangely intoxicating country, but it's so much more readable than Kingsolver whom I never finished. One of the most interesting aspects of Rosa Shand's novel is the beginning paragraph of each chapter in which she sets a scene or merely ponders on something unrelated to the action. These pieces are so very poetic in themselves. And then there's the story -- Agnes, who many women will relate to, who cannot "will herself" to love her unconnected husband, fantasizes about a man who she becomes inevitably bound with. But enough of that, read it yourself, you won't regret it. (And who in their right mind would call this book racist? The "reviewer" clearly missed the point if he/she even read beyond the first chapter...) Rosa Shand, please write more!
Review of The Gravity of Sunlight
  • Rated 4 stars
Reviewed by an Amazon user, September 8, 2000
In The Gravity of Sunlight, Rosa Shand explores one woman's desires for a fulfilled life beyond her marriage and motherhood. Set in Africa in the 1970s, The Gravity of Sunlight provides a look into the heart of an American woman who comes to terms with her own desires. Agnes remains true to her self while feeling torn between her wanting to do what is right and what will allow her to best express her needs. She chooses the latter. She does this at some expense to her family. However, the reader will want to cheer this character on. One cannot help but feel connected to her. Rosa Shand does a beautiful job with this novel. I especially enjoyed the exerpts at the beginning of each chapter. They helped create set the mood and provided me with an insight into the true heart of the novel. On the down side, I did not find the love scenes between Agnes and Wulf to have much substance. They should have maybe been more vivid, not graphic. But more descriptive. They seemed a bit abrupt in the novel and I know there was more to them than that. Overall, I do recommed this book. Both men and women would enjoy it.
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