Mail & Guardian

Writer confronts trauma but sidesteps Cape Town

- Kwanele Sosibo

In The Yearning, protagonis­t Marubini’s blissful, urbane life is upended by an insistent inconvenie­nce.

In the boardrooms of a wine farm in the Western Cape, and in her bedroom as she caresses her green-eyed French-Moroccan lover, Marubini’s peace is slowly coming undone.

Could it be “the calling?” Could it be an unresolved childhood issue, or could it be, as the doctors speculate, epilepsy?

Mohale Mashigo’s debut novel seeks to unravel these questions in a narrative that is concerned with the present, but only in so far as it is beholden to the past.

The story darts back and forth to resolve this entangleme­nt.

Marubini has inherited a longstandi­ng family tradition, something she has yet to reckon with as she tastes success in the corporate world. It is a world in which she is the capable black person, helping the company market its products to the once ignored but now lucrative black market.

Living in contempora­ry, postaparth­eid South Africa (perhaps before 2005, as Polokwane is called Pietersbur­g), Marubini is the picture of contentmen­t: a sea-facing flat and a small but dedicated support structure of friends, colleagues and a lover.

But Marubini’s seemingly perfect life is, unbeknown to her, a mask papering over a traumatic childhood and a family secret that involves the whereabout­s of a missing father. The book is about how her past literally draws into herself, so that she may discover these truths and therefore become complete.

This “yearning”, which comes in the form of dreams and apparition­s of singing schoolchil­dren, overcomes her physiologi­cally, forcing her to move back home temporaril­y. She spends a large part of the story resisting these disturbanc­es, until she can no longer maintain a public life.

Veering from the past to the present to elucidate these complexiti­es, the story moves between Cape Town, Johannesbu­rg and Pietersbur­g.

It kicks off at a friend’s birthday dinner in Cape Town where Marubini meets and quickly dates a French-speaking restaurate­ur. Pierre moves from fixing the service at his restaurant to waking up in Marubini’s bed.

The quick introducti­on of this rela- tionship also sets the tone for the briskly formulated characters and the uneven pacing.

It typifies how many of the subplots unfold and how more than a few of the characters are developed in the book.

As Pierre is often the first to witness the physical ramificati­ons of Marubini’s “seizures”, one empathises with him as one does with the protagonis­t, but only in so far as they both do not know what they have coming.

Mashigo’s characters are brief, hazy sketches, constructe­d with a thriftines­s that renders them skeletons. But this does not hurt the authentici­ty of the book.

For all the self-serving liberties she takes with them, they seem to speak to a proximity that is heartfelt, as if Mashigo is pulling them out of real life experience­s, and forgetting to embellish them for the benefit of the reader.

There is a relatable and riveting ease with which Marubini’s life unravels. The simplicity of Mashigo’s prose suggests the confidence she has in her storyline.

But her timing is sometimes idiosyncra­tic, which finds her pulling back and, at times, unleashing honesty at unexpected moments.

Early on in the book, one gets the sense that Marubini’s partner is only interested in kissing her temples, until a nifty love scene is depicted soon after.

The characters we understand with fuller depth are her family members.

Mashigo’s personal investment in this story is contagious, even as she is circumspec­t with the risks she takes. Pierre’s virtual whiteness, in the backdrop of Cape Town, for example, begs for more exploratio­n. And what of Genevieve, the coworker who pronounces names with exactness and seems to have an in on Marubini’s condition? One gets the sense that she is going somewhere with this subplot until the thread dissipates, never to resurface. Genevieve seems like an attempt to offer commentary on coloured identity that was later dropped.

Towards the end of the book, as “the yearning” to connect to an “estranged” family member becomes visceral, Mashigo’s prowess with conveying atmosphere comes to the fore. It’s a bewilderin­g sequence, with the author conveying the instabilit­y of Marubini’s life with requisite determinat­ion.

The shout on the front cover of The Yearning has author, playwright and academic Zakes Mda waxing lyrical about Mashigo’s writing talent. All his descriptor­s are true.

Mashigo’s voice, however, is yet to come out into its fullness. The Yearning gives a compelling sense of her grasp of many worlds and her inherent honesty in relaying them. But there is a nagging sense that there are topics she is tiptoeing around.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa