Girl from Lamaha Street

A Guyanese Girl at a 1960s English Boarding School and Her Search for Belonging

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Sharon Maas: Girl from Lamaha Street (2022, Bookouture)

English language

Published Nov. 8, 2022 by Bookouture.

ISBN:
978-1-80019-725-1
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4 stars (1 review)

Perhaps it’s true that absence makes the heart grow fonder. Perhaps it’s true that you only know what you truly love when you no longer have it. But I wouldn’t have known any of this if I hadn’t left it all behind to discover where my home truly was…

Growing up in British Guiana in the 1950s, Sharon Maas has everything a shy child with a vivid imagination could wish for. She spends her days studying bugs in the backyard, eating fresh mangos straight from the tree and tucked up on her granny’s lap losing herself in books.

But with her father campaigning for the country’s independence and her mother away for work, there’s a void in Sharon’s heart, and she craves rules and structure. The books she devours give her a glimpse of life in a faraway country: England. And although none of the characters in these books look …

2 editions

A lovely memoir

4 stars

The Girl From Lamaha Street is a lovely memoir which manages to capture a time and a place which no longer exists. 1950s British Guiana, if one's background ticked enough socially acceptable boxes, seems to have been a kind of paradise, especially for such a self-sufficient child as Sharon Maas could be. I was surprised at the striking similarities between aspects of her childhood and my own English one some two decades later. We read the same books, particularly all those pony stories - I too have fond memories of the My Friend Flicka series - our parents recited the same maxims, and our schools served pretty much exactly the same lunch menus!

Maas is painfully honest throughout this memoir about how much she yearned for her mother's presence, even while that maternal role was fulfilled by her grandmother and aunt. For a long time, the only child in an …