Blottentots and How to Make Them


Read by Ruth Golding

(3.8 stars; 7 reviews)

This is very short, but it is a book with lots of pictures, and it will be even better if you can look at the pictures in the book at http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44898 while you listen to the verses.

There are many short verses: the first verses tell you how to make a blottentot with a blot of ink on a piece of paper. You then fold the paper and press it gently to spread out the ink into peculiar shapes. The rest of the verses describe the funny creatures which you can make. I'm sure it could also be done with different colours using thin paint instead of ink, and it looks a lot of fun!

The author John Prosper Carmel is believed to be a pseudonym of Raymond Carter, who was the calligrapher, but of whom also nothing is known. (Summary by Ruth Golding) (0 hr 11 min)

Chapters

Blottentots and How to Make Them 11:00 Read by Ruth Golding

Reviews

Most racist book I've ever encountered.


(0.5 stars)

The title of the book is a play on words: hottentot. It's what they called my ancestors, because of their skin color. So, the fact that they're referred to as "blottentots" - ink blots on white paper - isn't accidental. It was deliberate. There's no way that writer couldn't have known this. Likened to an ink blot. Like an inconvenience. An accident.