A
Chameleon, a Boy and a Quest, J. A. Myhre
Both Mr 12 and I enjoyed this one and I
suspect Ms 8 & 10 will too. Written
by a long-term medical missionary to Africa for her children, it is about Mu, a
10-year old orphaned African boy. Going
about his usual day doing the women’s work of getting water for his family, Mu
is stopped by a chameleon speaking to him.
Going by the name Tita (the word for father or uncle), the chameleon
tells Mu he is about to go on a quest.
By the end of the day, Mu has left his home and headed across the
country. He does not understand where he
is going or why, and as they go Tita explains there is evil in the land with some people and animals serving Abbadon, the destroyer. Mu has to learn who he can trust and whether
his own character is up to the challenge.
There are subtle gospel themes throughout
dealing with truth, good and evil, love, grace, sacrifice and mercy. The story grabs your attention and
interest even with only a surface reading, but the additional themes give even
more depth to think and talk about. Myhre’s
writing is descriptive and evocative.
There were elements that reminded me of Patricia St John:
Right now the cool sharpness of the morning, the loneliness of the path, and the absence of the inevitable weight all filled him with a sense of something, a premonition close to joy but tinged with a darker hue, perhaps danger. He felt the slant of the morning sunlight through the palm fronds as a deep ache of the heart, a longing for something he couldn’t begin to name.
It seems this is the beginning of a series
and we look forward to future volumes.
Yet another good publication from New Growth Press, released only last
week.
Do you know where in Africa she was, or the story is set Wendy? (Kind of sounds west African maybe?)
ReplyDeleteTamie, the info on the New Growth Press website says East Africa, serving with Serge (formerly World Harvest Mission). W
ReplyDeleteOh, interesting! The chameleon trope is familiar to me but the language and names don't sound like Swahili. (Possibly a tribal language I guess - 100s of those going around!)
ReplyDelete