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Roots: The Saga of an American Family
Roots: The Saga of an American Family

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Author: Alex Haley
Creator: Michael Eric Dyson
Publisher: Vanguard Press
Category: Book

List Price: $15.95
Buy Used: $2.79
You Save: $13.16 (83%)



New (10) Used (23) Collectible (3) from $2.79

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 170 reviews
Sales Rank: 22842

Format: Bargain Price
Media: Paperback
Edition: Anv
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 899
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6
Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.7 x 2

Dewey Decimal Number: 929.20973
ASIN: B000WHAZLA

Publication Date: May 22, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Different Edition

Similar Items:

  • Roots (Four-Disc 30th Anniversary Edition)
  • The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As Told to Alex Haley
  • Alex Haley's Queen: The Story of an American Family
  • Roots - The Next Generations
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin (Wordsworth Classics)

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
This monumental Pulitzer Prize-winning saga and iconic bestseller is available for the first time on audio. Roots begins with a birth in an African village in 1750, and ends two centuries later at a funeral in Arkansas. In that time span, an unforgettable cast of men, women, and children come to life, many of them based on the people from Alex Haley's own family tree.

Presented abridged on 12 CDs.


Customer Reviews:   Read 165 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Great Book and One Worth Remembering!   August 17, 2008
I loved this book when it first came out and am now watching the miniseries all over again. It is wonderful to read and behold. Many of the family's lore has been proven to be fiction but does it matter? It is a great book and wonderful idea for a story. It brought back the idea of tracing people's roots that is still with us today. A wonderful read.


5 out of 5 stars A must read   August 9, 2008
anybody interested in American history or family this is the book to read. Hailey is a must read for eveybody.


4 out of 5 stars Reviw for the Kindle editon   April 13, 2008
I read this book on Kindle a couple of months ago. I remember watching the mini series as a kid but had never read the book. I'm not going to go into the literary aspects because that has been covered, in it's good and bad points already. I will say I'm glad I've read it. I won't consider it a completely accurate history lesson, but it does make a person think past normal boundaries. This book is formatted well for Kindle, it had no formatting issues. The fact I read it on Kindle was "handy" because I could look up tribal phrases in the dictionary, or wiki with little effort and go straight back to reading.


3 out of 5 stars A beloved book marred by flaws   March 11, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I love Roots and think the whole world should read it. It's an important and vital book about American history, family history, and triumph over hardship. I loved Roots the first time I read it twenty years ago, and I love it still, having just finished it yesterday, BUT...

1) If only Alex Haley hadn't plagiarized whole sections of the book (see Wikipedia's article on the author Harold Courlander)

2) If only Haley really HAD been related to Kunta Kinte (genealogists state he consciously perpetrated a hoax)

3) If only Juffure really WAS Haley's ancestral village (evidence suggests that the griot from modern Juffure with "memories" of Kunta Kinte's disappearance in 1767 was coached about what to "remember")

I found these fabrications depressing. And what's so sad is that I believe Haley had no need to lie and cheat, because he's really a top-notch storyteller.

This aside, though, I have a few other critical comments.

1) The book begins a slow descent into petering out after Kunta Kinte exits. The characters become increasingly wooden and one-dimensional. Kunta is great, Kizzy is good, Chicken George is fair, and everyone and almost everything after that is forgettable.

2) The book lauds having tons of children, mindlessly, and fails to criticize parents who have children and cannot provide for them. Haley makes it seem that having children and passing on the family name, no matter what horror the child risks getting subjected to, is the noblest of goals. I disagree! It sounds crass to say that slaves shouldn't have had children, but I hold all parents, slaves or not (rape victims being an exception), responsible when they knowingly bring children into a world of hell. (And Chicken George - a neglectful parent, to say the least - bringing 8 children into slavery? Nothing admirable there!)



5 out of 5 stars Roots   March 4, 2008
Love reading this book after so many years! It reminds me that all men deserve dignity and repect. Also, freedom is not free. We all in one way or another has paid a price for freedom!

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