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Marlene van Niekerk

    La escritura de Marlene van Niekerk se adentra en las crudas realidades de la sociedad sudafricana, entrelazando el comentario social con una profunda exploración psicológica. Sus obras, a menudo gráficas y controvertidas, diseccionan complejas dinámicas familiares y cambios sociales con una honestidad inquebrantable. Van Niekerk emplea magistralmente una mezcla de realismo crudo y lenguaje poético para desenterrar verdades profundamente humanas. Sus personajes, nacidos de paisajes sociales fracturados, luchan con la identidad y la pertenencia en un mundo en rápida transformación.

    Savannah's Silver Stories
    Memorandum
    Triomf
    Agaat
    • Agaat

      • 581 páginas
      • 21 horas de lectura

      Set in apartheid South Africa, Agaat portrays the unique relationship between Milla, a 67-year-old white woman, and her black maidservant turned caretaker, Agaat. Through flashbacks and diary entries, the reader learns about Milla's past. Life for white farmers in 1950s South Africa was full of promise — young and newly married, Milla raised a son and created her own farm out of a swathe of Cape mountainside. Forty years later her family has fallen apart, the country she knew is on the brink of huge change, and all she has left are memories and her proud, contrary, yet affectionate guardian. With haunting, lyrical prose, Marlene Van Niekerk creates a story of love and family loyalty. Winner of the South African Sunday Times Fiction Prize in 2007, Agaat was translated as The Way of the Women by Michiel Heyns, who received the Sol Plaatje Award for his translation.

      Agaat
      4,0
    • Triomf

      • 592 páginas
      • 21 horas de lectura

      This is the story of the four inhabitants of 127 Martha Street in the poor white suburb of Triomf. Living on the ruins of old Sophiatown, the freehold township razed to the ground as a so-called 'black spot', they await with trepidation their country's first democratic elections. It is a date that coincides fatefully with the fortieth birthday of Lambert, the oversexed misfit son of the house. There is also Treppie, master of misrule and family metaphysician; Pop, the angel of peace teetering on the brink of the grave; and Mol, the materfamilias in her eternal housecoat. Pestered on a daily basis by nosy neighbours, National Party canvassers and Jehovah's Witnesses, defenceless against the big city towering over them like a vengeful dinosaur, they often resort to quoting to each other the only consolation that they know; we still have each other and a roof over our heads. TRIOMF relentlessly probes Afrikaner history and politics, revealing the bizarre and tragic effect that apartheid had on exactly the white underclass who were most supposed to benefit. It is also a seriously funny investigation of the human endeavour to make sense of life even under the most abject of circumstances.

      Triomf
      3,7
    • Memorandum

      'n verhaal met skilderye

      • 136 páginas
      • 5 horas de lectura

      In this unique book the text and visual images offer parallel narratives that resonate poignantly with each other. The paintings quietly reflect the alienating experience of hospitalisation. The story is a gripping account by a lonely man who is diagnosed with cancer just before his retirement. The night before a scheduled operation he starts writnng a "memorandum" about a strange conversation he was party to during his previous stay in hospital, and the profound effect it hads on his life. Durinfg the act of writing he comes to a life-changing decision.

      Memorandum
      3,5