Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Peter Abrahams

Peter Abrahams was born in the slums of Vrededorp outside Johannes buns, South Africa. Abrahams father was an Ethiopian. The mother was a “ cape colored “, a term used in South Africa as a classification for persons of mixed racial descent. Abrahams didn’t have much control over his life when he was younger. He was nine or ten before he started to read, then he known that’s what he wanted to do. Abrahams started writing short stories and poems.
Peter Abrahams had attended school whenever he could manage to go between menial jobs. In 1939 he worked as a stoker on a ship to earn his passage to England, where he began to write articles for a newspaper and radio scripts for the BBC. Mine boy (1946), the path of thunder (1948), and subsequent novels called attention to racial barriers plaguing blacks in South Africa.
One thing everyone should know about Peter Abrahams is that he had a very hard life growing up is because of his color. Also, because Abrahams didn’t have much control over his life. One more thing you should know about Abrahams is that