Cape Times

Different shades of sexuality

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THE ECSTASY OF BRUSH STROKES Rachel Haze Loot.co.za (R130) MF Books

REVIEWER: KARINA M SZCZUREK

RACHEL Haze is the author of a local erotic novel which teasingly proclaims on its back cover that “there are far more than fifty shades”. The reference will be clear to most readers, even if you have never succumbed to the lure of EL James’s best-selling creations. I have never had the dubious pleasure of reading the books, but in general I have absolutely nothing against erotic fiction of any kind, and I have delighted in a few local titles of the genre in recent years.

The anthology of short stories, Adults Only, edited by Joanne Hichens, or the Girl Walks Into series by Helena S Paige come to mind. However, the book that still haunts me is Donvé Lee’s fierce and exquisitel­y written An Intimate War. On the front cover, Rachel Haze’s The Ecstasy of Brush Strokes promises the following: “Sexy. Intelligen­t. Erotic.” And it comes with an intriguing mystery surroundin­g its author. Her publisher, Melinda Ferguson said in a radio interview that the person behind the pseudonym is a well-known South African writer who prefers to remain anonymous so as not to tarnish her respectabl­e literary reputation.

The heroine of her novel has no such qualms and no hesitation­s to share any of her secrets, erotic or otherwise, with the reader.

Alex is in her late thirties, once divorced but in a stable relationsh­ip with Mark. Yet she continues obsessing about her university lover, Nicholas, with whom she had a turbulent affair. When the old flame suddenly reappears in her life, visiting from Canada in Cape Town on his way to a conference, Alex’s seemingly steady existence is turned upside down. She decides to rent an old house in a remote place in the Karoo and to return to her early passion for painting. She wants to capture desire on canvas.

To help her with the project, she hires a former lover and a local heart-throb to be her nude models.

The narrative oscillates between the present in the sleepy dorpie where Alex is frustrated with her artistic efforts and where the erotic tension between the models rises with the Karoo heat, and Alex’s memories of her student days with Nicholas in Grahamstow­n and her attempts to forget him in the aftermath of their explosive break-up.

And all the while, Mark is waiting for her to rediscover herself and Nicholas is only a sext message away. Haze explores different shades of sexuality with confidence. But occasional­ly she lost me when summarisin­g large chunks of Alex’s back story.

However, The Ecstasy of Brush Strokes holds your attention long enough to make you want to know what happens to Alex in the end and, most importantl­y, at times it simmers with the kind of eroticism which will appeal to many readers.

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