Books and writers

Information about the latest books and the people behind them

All rise: Tales of human rights and wrongs by Roger Chennells: a book review

Rory Riordan Books and writers 2024-07-19

"No, he is not a rock star lawyer, as are some of those mentioned at the top of this note, but he is instead a humbler man who limited his financial ambitions to work rather with the needy and the under-resourced. He did great work here, at no great profit. The best of South Africa is built on such people making such sacrifices."

Press release: Open Book Festival announces stellar lineup for 2024 | 6–8 September, Cape Town

LitNet Books and writers 2024-07-15

This year’s festival promises to be more than just a celebration of literature; it will serve as a vital platform for meaningful discussions. The lineup includes a wide array of talented writers, reflecting the rich tapestry of African literature.

The wolf hunt by Justin Fox: a review

Ian Sutherland Books and writers 2024-07-12

"The action scenes and literary descriptions of the ocean with all its vicissitudes are vivid – from the perspectives of both a submariner and a sailor on a surface vessel. The text is replete with historical references and technical details of life on board, and is aided by a glossary of naval terms at the beginning of the book."

Press release: AVBOB Poetry | A gift that can’t be quantified

LitNet Books and writers 2024-07-10

As South Africans prepare to celebrate Mandela Day on 18 July, the AVBOB Poetry Project is acknowledging Nkateka Masinga, a Mandela Washington Fellow and an award-winning writer, poet and scholar whose original voice pays tribute to the leaders and storytellers who came before her.

A love letter to Long Street: A reader’s impression

David Willers Books and writers 2024-07-09

"Meintjes devotedly nurses his grape and malt, the pool table and his favourite bars, while around him the grand spectacle of life unfolds, and the stoicism of Long Street is revealed on a nightly basis."

Press release | AVBOB Poetry: The art of being surprised

LitNet Books and writers 2024-07-01

This month, the AVBOB Poetry Project asked the award-winning South African poet Caitlin Stobie to reflect on what aspiring poets can do to channel more surprising, richly imagined words. Read the three creative writing tips Caitlin shared and notice how your experience of writing is transformed when you apply them to your own practice.

A voice from within: Decolonising the Palestinian mind | A conversation with Haidar Eid

Jannike Bergh, Haidar Eid Interviews 2024-06-27

"Gaza has become the centre of the universe, the same way Soweto was the centre of the universe." A book discussion and video interview with Haidar Eid, author and professor in postcolonial studies and postmodern literature at al-Aqsa University, Gaza City.

Fresh off the press: Commando: A Boer Journal of the Anglo-Boer War by Deneys Reitz, edited and annotated by Fransjohan Pretorius

LitNet Books and writers 2024-06-26

Commando is more than a historical document; it is a literary masterpiece that transcends time. With prose that captures both the brutality and the beauty of war, Reitz weaves a narrative that resonates with authenticity and passion. As relevant today as when it was first penned, Commando has become a South African classic and stands as a testament to the indomitable human spirit in the face of adversity.

Press release: Sanjana Thakur wins 2024 Commonwealth Short Story Prize

LitNet Books and writers 2024-06-26

Sanjana Thakur: "Writing stories is a way for me to accept that Mumbai is a city I will long for even when I am in it; it is a way to remake ‘place’ in my mind. I feel that the Commonwealth Short Story Prize offers that chance up to all of us: to be a writer who is from ‘somewhere’, to write from inside a legacy of colonialism and migration. I am so incredibly grateful to the prize for recognising that stories are not written in a vacuum." 

The child by Alistair Mackay: a book review

Owen Britz Books and writers 2024-06-25

"The topic of adoption by same-sex couples is a very important theme in the novel. Some of the questions posed and the fears experienced by the protagonist and his husband, I could relate to, like the vulnerability and also the sense of being scrutinised."

Moederland: Nine daughters of South Africa by Cato Pedder: a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2024-06-25

"I find this fast-becoming-popular genre of interrogating history through filtered personal and family experience to be a very pleasing literary direction in our country. You’ll not see me complain if we eventually replace the political novel with it, because not only does it gently provide us with a platform to reckon with our (national) past, but it gives us tools for higher consciousness to map up our personal lives also, which is what literature is supposed to do."

Marked by Gillian D’achada: reader impression

Christien Neser Books and writers 2024-06-18

"Teachers who have used Sharkey in their classes will feel very comfortable moving on to Marked. It is a solid classroom reader. It has enough flesh on the bone to tick all the boxes of the curriculum, while offering the children a fast-paced, enjoyable read."

UChulumanco incwadi ibhalwe ngu | by Tumelo Moleleki: udliwano-ndlebe | an interview

Naomi Meyer, Tumelo Moleleki Books and writers 2024-06-12

"Abantwana bayakuvuyela ukufundelwa ngolwimi lwabo." | "Children enjoy being read to in their own language."

Flight of the dancer by Lisa Lazarus: a reader’s impression

Isabel Hofmeyr Books and writers 2024-06-11

"Indeed, the book is richly rooted in the textures, sights and sounds of the city in the ’70s and ’80s. Whether it is bell-bottoms, Salusa 45, dwarves in Orange Grove gardens, Abdullah Ibrahim, student parties at Crown Mines, Bob Dylan, Beyers Naudé, MacGyver or The jewel in the crown, the book provides details which will trigger memories for anyone who experienced those years."

Athol Fugard and the Serpent Players: The Port Elizabeth years

Rory Riordan Books and writers 2024-06-11

John Kani: "This white man is here to suck their brains out!" Athol Fugard, the Grand Man of South African Literature, will turn 92 on Tuesday, 11 June 2024. Rory Riordan is writing a biography of the man who earned the title of "the foremost active playwright in the English-speaking world".

Press Release: AVBOB poetry mini-competition

LitNet Books and writers 2024-06-05

In April this year, the AVBOB Poetry Project ran a mini-competition on the theme "Three Ways to Look at a Person". We are announcing the names of the three winning poets and sharing their powerful words.

Press release: Programme and zoom links for Amazwi Children’s Literature Conference

LitNet Books and writers 2024-06-03

Here is a Zoom link for each day of the conference. Please find the programme for the Amazwi Children’s Literature Conference. 

Press release: One man shows: The Mbeki HIV Renaissance – the third volume is now available

LitNet Books and writers 2024-06-03

One man shows: The Mbeki HIV Renaissance (2000-2009) is the third book in the series by Pieter-Dirk Uys/Evita Bezuidenhout and welcomes the new century with a detailed focus on the HIV/AIDS pandemic in South Africa.

LitNet’s Kommadagga workshop with the Jakes Gerwel Foundation and Huisgenoot

LitNet Books and writers 2024-05-31

The Jakes Gerwel Foundation, LitNet and Huisgenoot are eagerly awaiting applications from promising emerging writers for the Kommadagga Workshop on the fine art of writing short prose.

Darlings of Durban by Shafinaaz Hassim: a classic example of chick lit

Janet van Eeden Books and writers 2024-05-31

"Darlings of Durban is a great holiday read. While it deals with serious issues in some of the relationships of the women, the novel is not meant to be scoured for national political commentary."

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