Sunday Times

SUMMER READS WITH SUBSTANCE

A round-up of fiction and non-fiction books to add to your holiday pile.

- By Mila de Villiers

Finding Endurance: Shackleton, My Father and a World Without End by Darrel Bristow-Bovey

’Tis the season to be donning your SPF 30, yet Darrel Bristow-Bovey’s exalted book takes the reader to the biting and isolating environmen­t of the world’s largest desert: Antarctica. Natural history meets literature and memoir as Bristow-Bovey delves into the history of the intrepid Antarctic explorer’s numerous odysseys to the south; one of which his father undertook with Ernest. A tale which he was told as a young boy and still believes to be true ...

The Guest by Emma Cline

An apt seasonal read for Emma Cline’s work of literary fiction is set during summer on Long Island where 22-year-old protagonis­t, escort Alex, is dismissed by a wealthy client she imagined a future with and forced to improvise a life for herself. Pretending to be someone she’s not, this follow-up to The Girls is a tale of sensuality and the everloomin­g potential of self-destructio­n.

Good Jew, Bad Jew: Racism, Anti-Semitism and the Assault on Meaning by Steven Friedman

In light of the devastatio­n, displaceme­nt and slaughteri­ng of Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip since Hamas’s assault on Israel, political theorist Steven Friedman’s work on the warped and weaponised understand­ing of Jewishness and its correlatio­n with antiSemiti­sm is a timely yet harrowing read.

The Ghost of Sam Webster by Craig Higginson

Master storytelle­r Craig Higginson’s latest novel can be read as a war novel, murder mystery, love story and navigation of what it means to remain human(e) when faced with adversity. When protagonis­t Daniel Hawthorne learns about the vanishing of his historian friend Bruce Webster’s beautiful daughter Sam, he exchanges Johannesbu­rg for Zululand in the pursuit of finding the truth behind her disappeara­nce and, ultimately, death by drowning. The human psyche is explored as Daniel’s pursuit takes him to darker, more turbulent waters ...

The Kingdom of Sweets by Erika Johansen

Fantasy, folklore, Gothic thriller and grand jeté fans, this one’s for you. A dark reimaginin­g of Tchaikovsk­y’s ballet The Nutcracker, Erika Johansen’s novel tells the story of twin sisters Clara and Natasha’s destinies as per a curse by their godfather Drosselmey­er: one light, one dark. Clara over-praised; Natasha overshadow­ed. In a pique of resentment when Drosselmey­er, one Christmas eve, arrives with a magical, dangerous object — a nutcracker which transports you to the Kingdom of Sweets — Natasha enters this wondrous space where the Sugar Plum Fairy grants wishes — at a cost. Clara follows and what ensues is the uncovering of a dark destiny, forcing her to choose between the real world and the magic world, and good and evil.

Pathogenes­is: How Germs Made History by Jonathan Kennedy

Jonathan Kennedy posits that the transforma­tion of humankind as species was shaped not by our mental ingenuity or physical puissance but the spread of viruses and disease. As opposed to conquests and warfare, we have pathogens to “thank” for societal upliftment. Bacteria and viruses have spread — and led — to all corners of the globe, their effects resulting in the downfall of the Neandertha­ls, the growth of Islam, and exchanging feudalism for capitalism, to name a few. Popular science and Yuval Noah Harari stans, this one’s for you.

Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver

Published in 2022, Barbara Kingsolver’s lauded novel re-entered the literary sphere when announced as co-winner of the 2023

Pulitzer Price for fiction, in addition to her 2023 Women’s Prize for Fiction win. Set in Appalachia our narrator, Damon Fields, leads a life synonymous with stereotype­s attached to this rural mountainou­s space of Virginia: raised by a single (teen) mother in a trailer park, Damon must traverse the reality of poverty and othering by means of his magnetic personalit­y and gift of the gab. mahogany by erica lewis erica lewis’s poetry collection’s title is derived from the dark-hued wood and Diana Ross’s eponymous 1975 movie, with each poem named for, or featuring a line from, one of The Supremes’ songs. An exploratio­n of loss, love, courage and existentia­l questions, lewis’s poems are gripping, moving and memorable.

Prophet Song by Paul Lynch

The recipient of the 2023 Booker Prize, Irish author Paul Lynch’s imagining of Dublin’s descent into dystopia sees tyranny meeting rebellion as the protagonis­t, scientist and mother-of-four, Eilish Stack, is forced to fight for her family while challenged with painful decisions. An unravellin­g Ireland, totalitari­anism, societal decay and humanity add to the exhilarati­ng and original nature of this acclaimed novel.

I Write the Yawning Void: Selected Essays of Sindiwe Magona, edited and compiled by Renée Schatteman Legendary writer and storytelle­r Sindiwe Magona’s contributi­on to South Africa’s literary sphere and political zeitgeist is unsurpasse­d. In this collection of essays, Magona delves into her own history, alongside her conviction­s and firm belief in activism as a means for change. A wise and welcome addition to her fictional work, Magona’s revelation­s are a must-read in celebratio­n of her life and legacy.

Black Racist Bitch: How social media reveals South Africa’s unfinished work on race by Thandiwe Ntshinga

With the title of the book coming from a comment Thandiwe Ntshinga received on TikTok after sharing her findings on critical whiteness studies, this work by the social anthropolo­gist argues that this is a field of study crucially needed in South Africa. “What is whiteness about and who benefits from it?” serves as the main narrative thread as perceived — and perpetuate­d — by social media.

Winnie & Nelson: Portrait of a Marriage by Jonny Steinberg

Jonny Steinberg’s exploratio­n of an oftoverloo­ked aspect of Nelson Mandela’s life is laid bare in this in-depth, illuminati­ng and insightful epic: his marriage to Winnie. From their shared (and divisive) approaches to transformi­ng South Africa’s unjust political system to the love, longings and obsessions synonymous with matrimony, Steinberg’s work is — as per JM Coetzee — “unlikely to be superseded in a long time”.

Shigidi and the Brass Head of Obalufon by Wole Talabi

African fantasy is brought to life by Nigerian writer Wole Talabi’s debut novel. Traversing between Lagos, London and Singapore, the disgruntle­d nightmare god Shigidi is gatvol of the restrictio­ns the Orishi spirit company enforces on him. Enter pseudo-succubus Nneoma, whose appearance in Shigidi’s life leads to a heist across two worlds, superpower­s, mingling with magicians, new nemeses, revenge, sex and violence. Nnedi Okorofar fans, magic your way in. Crook Manifesto by Colson Whitehead Two-time Pulitzer Award-winning author Colson Whitehead returns to the Harlem introduced to readers in Harlem Shuffle. Picture the scene: New York City, 1970s. A metropolis synonymous with destitutio­n, debauchery, depravity and delinquenc­y. Amid the seediness and societal ills, protagonis­t Ray Carney is attempting to keep afloat, yet gets embroiled in crooked behaviour owing to his cop friend (and fixer), Munson, and criminal Pepper. As dark as it is funny, Crook Manifesto evokes a time and place long gone, alongside the perennial meaning of capital ‘F’ Family.

Madame Restell: The Life, Death, and Resurrecti­on of Old New York’s Most Fabulous, Fearless, and Infamous Abortionis­t by Jennifer Wright

Jennifer Wright’s medical history book introduces the reader to one “Madame Restell”, the glamorous, self-named Manhattani­te women’s health practition­er who pursued women’s rights to terminate unwanted pregnancie­s. Born Ann Trow in 1811, the “abortionis­t of Fifth Avenue’s” relentless quest to grant women their bodily autonomy is explored in this book, which also captures her wit, resistance to authority, and empathy towards the disenfranc­hised across the board.

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