The Independent on Saturday

Durban North teen launches her first novel

- TANYA WATERWORTH tanya.waterworth@inl.co.za

THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD Emily Briggeman from Durban North started to write her book Tribes at the start of lockdown, with no idea that her story would end up being published.

The Reddam House uMhlanga pupil said this week that as the lockdown continued, she started to play with the idea of publishing the book.

“At first I was just writing, I had the plot worked out and started building up the chapters. I had never written a whole book before, but the more I wrote the more I thought about publishing,” said Emily this week.

Tribes, which she described as a fantasy adventure, also has a little romance and comedy thrown in and is aimed at readers aged between 9 and 14.

Emily said the story is set around her main character, Grace Millar, 13, who thinks she is invisible. But then a note leads Grace on a journey of mystery and self-discovery to a secret world, which changes everything she thought she knew about herself and her family.

And as Grace looks for answers about what really happened to her father and questions whether her secret admirer is who he says he is and what her mother is hiding from her, she discovers that her life will never be the same again.

“Grace is in her first year of high school and I’ve really loved drawing out the characters and creating the story. The last month or so of writing was very intense,” said Emily, who is also in her first year of high school.

Emily was home-schooled during her primary school years. Born in Durban, she had travelled extensivel­y with her parents and younger brother during those years. Although her favourite places to visit are Switzerlan­d and France, her book is set in Canada.

Emily said she enjoyed being creative and loves art, dance, playing the piano and baking. While her favourite baking recipe is Top Deck cookies, a recipe she tweaked from her mother, Emily also spends time teaching baking to underprivi­leged children.

“I really enjoy cooking as a whole and I make a lot of snacks and often make breakfast for the family,” she said, adding her baking masterpiec­e was an eight-layer unicorn and sunflower cake.

She also enjoys track training and water polo and her mother, Eloise, said the family enjoyed keeping fit together, often going for runs on the promenade, and they have competed in the TinMan triathlon.

Eloise said: “Emily is an extremely creative person and always does whatever she sets her mind to.

“As parents, we are thrilled that she is exploring her passion and ticking off her bucket list already. You only get to live once.”

The book was published by Reach Publishers in Durban, with outside editor, Kylie Crichton describing Tribes as “fun and creative”.

One of Emily’s friends, 12-year-old Keira Lourens, said: “I absolutely loved Tribes and just couldn’t put it down until it was finished. As an almost 13-year-old, the storyline kept me captivated. The artwork is amazing and made the story come to life.”

The book is available on Amazon and will be in bookstores from March 1.

 ?? African News Agency (ANA) | SHELLEY KJONSTAD ?? AUTHOR of Tribes, Emily Briggeman, 13, relaxes at her Durban North home with pets Roxy (front) and Chanel (back).
African News Agency (ANA) | SHELLEY KJONSTAD AUTHOR of Tribes, Emily Briggeman, 13, relaxes at her Durban North home with pets Roxy (front) and Chanel (back).

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