Genre
Historical Fiction
Setting and Context
The book’s setting starts in London and then ends in Kenya. The book is written in the context of adventure and exploration.
Narrator and Point of View
Third-person narrative
Tone and Mood
Adventurers, quixotic, stimulating, enthralling
Protagonist and Antagonist
Beryl Markham is the protagonist of the story.
Major Conflict
The conflict is that Beryl Markham is a wild child while growing up because she is experimental. For instance, after she joins boarding school, she hides a poisonous snake beside her bed. Later, she steals a horse and uses it to run away from school.
Climax
The climax is when Beryl becomes the first woman in Kenya to be granted a horse training license at 18.
Foreshadowing
Her experimental behaviour foreshadowed Beryl's promiscuity behaviour because she did not satisfy one man. Therefore, she left one man for the other.
Understatement
Kenya’s natural beauty is understated. Besides having a unique and inclusive culture, the country has beautiful hills, valleys and wildlife. Therefore, the protagonist finds it difficult to stay in London and opts to settle in Kenya.
Allusions
The story alludes to life in the post-colonial period and the protagonist's frustrations to discover her purpose.
Imagery
The imagery of parenting is one of the dominant imageries used by the author in the book. For instance, the description of Beryl's family is perfect sight imagery that helps readers understand why the protagonist is a frustrated young woman. Beryl's parents are separated, and the father is always absent. When Beryl gets her child, she does not love her because she is born with defects. Therefore, poor parenting is evident throughout the text.
Paradox
The main paradox is that when Beryl escapes her father's brutality and gets married to an older man, she expects love, protection and provision. Ironically, the man is alcoholic, dominating and abusive, making Beryl's life worse than before. At last, Beryl decides to quit that marriage.
Parallelism
The life in London parallels the life of Kenya because no matter how the protagonist desires to go back to England, she decides to settle in Kenya for the rest of her life.
Metonymy and Synecdoche
N/A
Personification
The horse is personified when the protagonist says that it helped her escape from school.