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The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind – An Indomitable Story

Submitted by Hunter Xu on Friday, 9 October 2009One Comment

Author: William Kamkwamba,  Bryan Mealer

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind Review:
William Kamkwamba is a great author, his book tells a moving and indomitable story, ‘The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind’ is inspirational. this book takes you on a journey to discover pure innovation of a natural genjus. this should be required reading for anyone who dares to dream. A powerful read, take your future into your hands.

‘The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind’ summary:
The story is in three parts. The first part tells of Willam’s life growing up and that of his father, giving a fascinating glimpse of the village life of subsistence farmers whose culture has changed little in thousands of years. Daily existence includes very real fears of witchcraft, shamans for healing, and strong currents of superstition. Although written in clear, simple narrative (mostly by the co-author, Bryan Mealer, an AP reporter with extensive experience across Africa), it is by no means a child’s bedtime story. Malawi, an interior country of 13 million, has minimal health care, primitive agriculture, and no free public high schools. Villagers can be killed by wild animals in the forest. In 2001 the maize crops failed, plunging the countryside into famine and near social collapse, and William loses friends to disease and starvation. The government comes off badly in this episode, incompetent, brutal against the local village chief who complains, and corrupt.

William is a bright boy eager for school, but his family cannot afford the fees. He is forced to drop out. In the second part of the story, doing the best he can in spite of this disappointment, William finds an elementary physics textbook in a local library and sees diagrams of windmills – he cannot even read the English text. From this bit of information, with impressive focus and persistence he manages to build his own version from scraps of wire, an old bicycle hub, and flattened PVC pipe for blades. He has zero resources – not even a soldering iron, which would be useless in any case since there is no electricity in his household. But he is a natural engineer, and even with no guidance or help, he succeeds in making an operating windmill which powers a few lightbulbs for home and village, charges cell phones, operates a water pump – all of which make a real difference in village life.

The third part of the book, just as remarkable as his technological triumph, is about William’s discovery by the outside world. The hero of the discovery phase is really the Internet. William’s windmill comes to the attention of an engineer working in the capital city, who blogs about it, inspiring others to take a four hour bus journey to find William, who then quickly comes to the attention of international entrepreneurs and technologists. His life quickly expands – amazingly, straight from his village he is invited to speak at an African conference organized by TED, the California organization which publicizes emerging ideas about technology and design. Taken under wing by US sponsors, he travels internationally and finds scholarships for his own education as well as funding for his village technology.

Step by step, Willam explains what he needed for the windmill, how he adapted things he found in the junkyard, or took odd jobs to get money to buy what he could not make. Some simple tasks took three or four hours because he did not have the right tools and had to improvise. But he kept at it. All in all, he probably put a hundred or more hours into this project. Talk about determination! As I read the story, I could not help thinking how wasteful we are here in America.

William Kamkwamba is an alchemist who turned misfortune into opportunity, opportunity beyond his own. ‘The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind’ is really a good reading for anyone who dares to dream.

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The Book Details:

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow; First Edition, First Printing edition
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061730327
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061730320

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One Comment »

  • Residential Garage Doors said:

    Residential Garage Doors…

    I don’t care what people on here is saying, it obvious you are one step ahead of us….

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