The Herald (South Africa)

Book with a difference penned by talented teen

- Naledi Shange

MEET the teenage feminist who has just published her first book

Tired of reading about damsels in distress who are saved by knights in shining armour‚ Ripfumelo Nkomo said she started writing her own books shortly after learning to write.

“I was around eight when I wrote my first manuscript‚” the 15-year-old said.

“My mother loved buying me princess books but I always felt I could not relate.

“I felt they limited me to a particular belief‚ topic or normality‚ that girls are meant to act in a certain way.

“I felt different and I wanted to challenge that. I’ve always been one to question power.”

The titles of some of her manuscript­s are proof of her independen­t thinking: Queens who Don’t Need Kings‚ Single Mothers who are Supermoms and Everyone is Crazy.

“Queens who Don’t Need Kings is basically about women being strong and not needing a man to do or achieve anything‚ not needing validation and knowing they can do anything at all‚” Nkomo said.

“The second manuscript is about friends of mine who grew up with single parents.

“These women have always paid the bills‚ empowered their daughters and taught them that they can be anything they want.”

Everyone is Crazy was writjust ten when Nkomo was eight or nine to raise awareness about mental illness.

“The black community doesn’t always understand that this is an imbalance of the mind‚” the teenager said.

“That one was actually based on different characters I saw in my class.”

Nkomo – now a Grade 10 pupil from Boksburg – has self-published her very first book‚ which she hopes to see on bookshelve­s around the country.

“It’s called Indulge in the Profound‚” Nkomo said.

The 91-page book was all about exploring everything she saw around her.

“It speaks about societal issues‚ politics‚ spirituali­ty‚ inner beauty and the impact of the media‚” Nkomo said.

While other teens may battle with the struggles of high school‚ friendship­s and relationsh­ips and even self-discovery‚ Nkomo said she was enjoying this part of her life.

“I’m different because I choose to be,” she said.

“I try to not let the norm and society and things happening around me influence who I become. I understand that I am in transit.

“I know I am moving forward and each day is a step towards the future and it’s all about God.”

Nkomo hopes to study screenwrit­ing after matric and wants to produce stories about women and girls around Africa. – TimesLIVE

My mother loved buying me princess books but I always felt I could not relate

 ??  ?? FORWARD THINKING: Writer Ripfumelo Nkomo
FORWARD THINKING: Writer Ripfumelo Nkomo

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