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William Kamkwamba was born in Malawi, a land withered by drought and hunger, a place where hope and opportunity were hard to find. But William had read about windmills and dreamed of building one that would bring his family electricity and running water, luxuries that only two percent of Malawians could afford. He used scrap metal, tractor parts, and bicycle halves to forge a crude machine that eventually powered four lights, complete with homemade switches and a circuit breaker made from nails and wire. A second windmill turned a water pump that could battle the drought and famine looming with every season.
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind will inspire anyone who doubts the power of one individual's ability to change his community and better the lives of those on an entire continent.
Starred Review.
American readers will have their imaginations challenged by 14-year-old Kamkwamba's description of life in Malawi, a famine-stricken, land-locked nation in southern Africa: math is taught in school with the aid of bottle tops ("three Coca-Cola plus ten Carlsberg equal thirteen"), people are slaughtered by enemy warriors "disguised... as green grass" and a ferocious black rhino; and everyday trading is "replaced by the business of survival" after famine hits the country. After starving for five months on his family's small farm, the corn harvest slowly brings Kamkwamba back to life. Witnessing his family's struggle, Kamkwamba's supercharged curiosity leads him to pursue the improbable dream of using "electric wind"(they have no word for windmills) to harness energy for the farm. Kamkwamba's efforts were of course derided; salvaging a motley collection of materials, from his father's broken bike to his mother's clothes line, he was often greeted to the tune of "Ah, look, the madman has come with his garbage." This exquisite tale strips life down to its barest essentials, and once there finds reason for hopes and dreams, and is especially resonant for Americans given the economy and increasingly heated debates over health care and energy policy.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
William Kamkwamba is a student at African Leadership Academy and a 2007 TED Global Fellow. He has been profiled in The Wall Street Journal and, in 2008, he delivered an address at the World Economic Forum on Africa.
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February 06, 2010: while the writing style of this book is not anything out of the ordinary the look into the heart and mind of a child/boy/youngman/in starving malawi is anything but ordinary.The book brings you into the life in rural malawi during good times and bad.life is as it is .the authors ability to move forward with a project he has designed in his own mind with the help of textbooks written in a language he does not understand no matter how difficult is tribute to his enduring spirit.
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January 30, 2010: I gave this book to me son, who is in environmental studies and interested in sustainable development. He's really found it interesting.