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Book Reviews of The Headhunter's Daughter

The Headhunter's Daughter
Author: Tamar Myers
ISBN-13: 9781445837468
ISBN-10: 1445837463
Publication Date: 11/1/2011
Edition: Large type edition
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Chivers
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

cathyskye avatar reviewed The Headhunter's Daughter on + 2309 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
First Line: The gravel pits had been haunted for the past six years, ever since the first white woman drowned.

In 1945 an infant was left out by the gravel pits as a result of a botched kidnapping plot. The baby girl is found by a young Bashilele tribesman on his quest to claim the head of an enemy. The young boy takes the baby back to his tribe where she is raised as a member of his family-- even though her pale skin, straw-like hair and strange blue eyes mark her as being very different from the rest.

Thirteen years later, young missionary Amanda Brown hears the stories of a white girl living among the Bashilele headhunters. She enlists the help of the local police chief, Captain Pierre Jardin, and brings along the witch doctor's wife, Cripple, to act as translator. They find the young girl (now called "Ugly Eyes") and bring her back to the Missionary Rest House and "civilization". But the young white girl no longer belongs in Amanda Brown's world, and the secrets surrounding her birth and disappearance prove to be very deadly indeed.

Author Tamar Myers was born and raised in the Congo, so this is very familiar territory to her. (When reading the book, don't skip The Author Answers Some of Your Questions section at the end of the book where Myers talks about her life in Africa.)

The plot is well-paced and the mystery very intriguing. I didn't figure out the mastermind behind everything and did an "of course!" eye roll at the reveal.

Amanda is a good blend of strength and naivete. She truly wants to do the right thing even if that right thing doesn't coincide with what her judgmental elders believe-- and she has the delightful habit of speaking her mind before she can stop herself.

The book really shines in the setting and the clashing cultures. Myers delves a bit deeper into the Congo's tortured past as a colony under the rule of King Leopold II of Belgium and what the whites believe will happen when the Congo becomes independent in a couple of years.

The clashing cultures show to best advantage when Amanda's servants at the guest house try to decipher white behavior and dress. The scene where Cripple and Protruding Navel try to figure out how to put a bra on the young white girl is hilarious.

Returning to "civilization" after so many years, the young white girl probably has the best sense of the difference between the cultures:

"The laughter of women as they set about doing their daily chores. Next to her mother, that is what Ugly Eyes had missed the most about village life. White people were so serious, their mouths perpetually pulled down at the corners, their foreheads so quick to pucker. Ugly Eyes did not know of a single village woman who bore vertical creases between her eyes, yet almost every woman at the party the night before had at least the beginnings of one."


I enjoy this series for its truthfulness, gentleness, humor and unpredictability. There is more than meets the eye between their covers. The lasting image of the books for me is the resident gargantuan crocodile who lives at the bottom of the ravine next to the Missionary Rest House. Seldom ever seen, the crocodile is well fed, since the rest house throws its garbage down there. In addition, there have been times that the unwary human has stumbled at the edge and fallen... never to be seen again.
reviewed The Headhunter's Daughter on + 29 more book reviews
I really expected more from this book. A small part told of her experiences, as a child, attending Mission School and relating to the native children. However, the writing was disjointed and while she shared parts of her life in Africa she failed to develop a comprehensive account of her experiences there. It seemed like she carried a pad with her and wrote down bits of her memories of her early life. She had a great opportunity to write a great book, but I feel failed in that attempt.
jlautner avatar reviewed The Headhunter's Daughter on + 106 more book reviews
Curious little tale. A baby is stolen, somewhat accidentally, by a member of a remote tribe in the Belgian Congo, in 1945. Years later a young missionary hears rumors of a white child in the jungle, and ultimately the two meet.

"Ugly Eyes", the white child, is now thirteen and upset at the tribe's custom of marrying off girls at her age. She wants out. At the same time, she has been raised by a loving family and knows no other life. So when she is confronted with white missionaries she holds her ground.

The young missionary, Amanda Brown, tries to make things right. But there is only so much that can be made right at this point.

Told with a lot of wit (not all of which I appreciated) and simplicity, the story gives us some understanding of those days of separation of white and black. And give us some knowledge about these remote tribes. I always appreciate these glimpses into lives I will never know.
reading-voraciously avatar reviewed The Headhunter's Daughter on + 9 more book reviews
The Headhunter's Daughter is a great sequel to The Witch Doctor's Wife. Myers' early childhood memories as the daughter of missionaries in Congo have formed a basis for these two stories. What a surprising story and interesting characters who are sometimes what I'd say are typical! The story is a mystery about a white girl found in an African tribe and the setting is a small village where there are many Europeans, several African tribes represented, and a few Americans. Wherever did the girl come from? What a great story!
If you didn't already read The Witch Doctor's Wife you will be eager to where several of the characters are the same.
reviewed The Headhunter's Daughter on + 3 more book reviews
ok reading but unbelievable