TED Conference

Africa, Books, Current Affairs, Inspiration, Libraries, Life Lessons, Malawi, Memoir, Readers Advisory Book/Review Swap, TED Conference, Television, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, The Daily Show, William Kamkwamba

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind on The Daily Show!

We’ve been talking about The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind for months – telling everyone who’d listen how inspiring and downright unbelievable this story is.  A boy from a village in Africa – too poor to attend school – is inspired by a librarian to read.  He picks up a book on windmills and figures out how to build one out of scraps found in a junkheap.  He generates electricity and changes the trajectory of his life and the lives of his community.  From Malawi to the Daily Show with Jon Stewart.  What a difference a windmill makes.  Here's a link to our previous posts.  Take a look…

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
William Kamkwamba
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Ron Paul Interview

-Virginia

Africa, AIDS, American Library Association, Books, Family, Happiness, Inspiration, Libraries, Malawi, Memoir, TED Conference, William Kamkwamba

The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind

We are so thrilled to have Tavia Kowalchuk, Marketing Director for William Morrow, Eos and Cookbooks (imprints of HarperCollins Publishers) as a guest blogger today.  Tavia is excited about the publication of the forthcoming title, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind.

Enjoy!

-Bobby 
—————————————————————————————————————

BoyWhoHarnessed hc c The buzz is building for the soon-to-be-released THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND –the inspirational true story about an enterprising teenager in Malawi who built a windmill from scraps found around his village and brought electricity—and a future—to himself and his family.

William Kamkwamba, grew up poor in Malawi, Africa, a country suffering from poverty, famine, AIDS and lack of basic services like plumbing and electricity. When William was 14 and unable to attend school because his family couldn’t afford the $80 tuition, he began thinking a lot about electricity. After being given a book about windmills by his local librarian, he decided to build his own using scrap metal, tractor parts, and blue-gum trees, which grew near his village. William’s home-made contraption succeeded in supplying electricity to his family’s compound. You can click here to read an excerpt from his memoir before the book is on sale (September 29th), but in the meantime, here is an exclusive interview with the librarian in Malawi who gave William the book that changed his life.

Meet librarian Edith Sikelo.  Mrs. Sikelo was sitting behind her desk at the library when William first walked in.
Mrs. Edith Sikelo William Kamkwamba's Community Librarian

Wimbe Community Lending Library pic 2 (not as good)

She quickly noticed his interest in science books and encouraged him to keep reading. His library card soon grew to several pages, which Sikelo now keeps to show visitors, and to brandish to younger students as an example of success.
William's library card part 1 
Mrs. Sikelo was recently interviewed by Tom Rielly, Community Director of the TED Conference, a major party in promoting William’s story throughout the world.

Africa, AIDS, American Library Association, Books, Family, Libraries, Malawi, TED Conference, William Kamkwamba

The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind

BoyWhoHarnessed hc c The buzz is building for the soon-to-be-released THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND – the inspirational true story about an enterprising teenager in Malawi who built a windmill from scraps found around his village and brought electricity–and a future—to himself and his family.

William Kamkwamba grew up poor in Malawi, Africa, a country suffering from AIDS and poverty. Like most in his village, his family struggled to survive as farmers and did not have access to electricity. The situation became all the more desperate in 2002, as Malawi experienced the worst famine in fifty years. William was 14 and his family could no longer afford his school’s $80-a-year tuition.

During this time William began thinking a lot about electricity, which only two percent of Malawians can afford. After discovering a book in a nearby library about windmills, he decided to build his own using scrap metal, tractor parts, and blue-gum trees, which grew near his village. William’s home-made contraption succeeded in supplying electricity to his family’s compound–enough for four lightbulbs and two radios! News of his invention spread, attracting many people across the world who offered to help him. Soon he was re-enrolled in school and traveling to the United States to visit wind farms, much like the ones he hopes to build across Africa. THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND tells the story of one boy’s struggle to advance himself from nothing, and his journey to inspire other Africans–and the whole world.

The following links are also helpful in learning more about William Kamkwamba and his forthcoming book, THE BOY WHO HARNESSED THE WIND.

WILLIAM'S BLOG: http://williamkamkwamba.typepad.com/
WILLIAM'S AUTHOR ASSISTANT PAGE: http://harpercollins.com/authors/35128/William_Kamkwamba/index.aspx
BRYAN MEALER'S AUTHOR ASSISTANT PAGE: http://www.harpercollins.com/author/index.aspx?authorID=35129
BROWSE INSIDE: http://browseinside.harpercollins.com/index.aspx?isbn13=9780061730320
MOVING WINDMILLS, William's Foundation: http://movingwindmills.org/
VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arD374MFk4w
 

-Virginia

Scroll to Top