The Herald (South Africa)

Cape Flats tale a gripping read

- Eleanor Douglas-Meyers

Kinnes is the debut novel of the winner of the inaugural Adam and Rosalie Small Award for Debutant/Debutante Writers, 29-year-old playwright Chase Rhys.

According to Rhys, he wrote the book to honour the lives of children who become victims of violence on the Cape Flats.

Having grown up in Ocean View, Cape Town, he has been quoted as saying he used personal experience­s to create his characters.

The book is written in colloquial Afrikaans with English thrown in, giving an authentic Capetonian feel.

Following the journey of matric couple Nicole Lamb and Derick Delcarme, “Cape Kardashian” Rolanda Ficher, gang leader Anwaar “Ahnie” Brandt and the people in their lives, Rhys lets one discover and understand a single story from various viewpoints.

He looks at the previous generation­s and how everyone eventually ended up in their various roles and you find that not everything is as black and white as it seems at first.

The book is set in Jurassic Park on the Cape Flats where gang leader Brandt has had a taste of fame acting in a movie filmed there. He opts to follow the limelight using intimidati­on, violence and social media as his tools.

The fairly short book – 204 pages – is a real page-turner, which manages to entertain, educate and leave you feeling like you have been let in on a tragic community secret.

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