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The Way Around

Finding My Mother and Myself Among the Yanomami

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Rooted in two vastly different cultures, a young man struggles to understand himself, find his place in the world, and reconnect with his mother—and her remote tribe in the deepest jungles of the Amazon rainforest—in this powerful memoir that combines adventure, history, and anthropology.

"My Yanomami family called me by name. Anyopo-we. What it means, I soon learned, is 'long way around': I'd taken the long way around obstacles to be here among my people, back where I started. A twenty-year detour."

For much of his young life, David Good was torn between two vastly different worlds. The son of an American anthropologist and a tribeswoman from a distant part of the Amazon, it took him twenty years to embrace his identity, reunite with the mother who left him when he was six, and claim his heritage.

The Way Around is Good's amazing chronicle of self-discovery. Moving from the wilds of the Amazonian jungle to the paved confines of suburban New Jersey and back, it is the story of his parents, his American scientist-father and his mother who could not fully adapt to the Western lifestyle. Good writes sympathetically about his mother's abandonment and the deleterious effect it had on his young self; of his rebellious teenage years marked by depression and drinking, and the near-fatal car accident that transformed him and gave him purpose to find a way back to his mother.

A compelling tale of recovery and discovery, The Way Around is a poignant, fascinating exploration of what family really means, and the way that the strongest bonds endure, even across decades and worlds.

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    • Booklist

      November 1, 2015
      In 1975, American anthropologist and doctoral student Kenneth Good went to study the seminomadic Yanomami in the upper waters of the Orinoco River in Venezuela and found himself a wife, Yarima. David Good, one of the products of that improbable alliance, chronicles (assisted by coauthor Paisner), the complicated choices the marriage forced on his parents and his struggles with depression after his mother's abandonment of their family when he was just six and later alcoholism. It was only after coming to terms with the vast cultural chasms between his parents' lives that Good found a measure of forgiveness and returned to the Yanomami as a way of reconciling his fractured past and complex legacy. Founder of the Good Project, which helps preserve indigenous groups in South and Central America, Good sometimes peppers his memoir with too many mundane details, which somewhat slackens the narrative pace, but there is plenty of humor and insight in here as well. What eventually emerges is a moving embrace of roots and the power of forgiveness to heal even the deepest emotional scars.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

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