Foreword Reviews

STILL LIFE

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Zoë Wicomb, The New Press (NOV 3) Hardcover $25.99 (304pp) 978-1-62097-610-4

Historical figures reevaluate the legacy of an abolitioni­st in Zoë Wicomb’s novel Still Life.

Plagued by writer’s block, an author allows the contempora­ries of Thomas Pringle, a Scottish-born poet and abolitioni­st, to take the reins and record his history themselves. Their admiration of, and gratitude for, their beloved “Mr P” is soon tempered by doubts about his true motives. As they learn more about Thomas and their own lives, each decides how to cope with the new informatio­n.

The unnamed author uses contempora­neous written works to resurrect Mary and Hinza, former slaves rescued by Thomas and his wife. Granted new lives for the purposes of bolstering Thomas’s reputation, Mary and Hinza navigate the morals and judgments of the modern world and hold each other to account. They revisit Thomas’s life, from his abolitioni­st work to his poems about life in nineteenth-century South Africa. They wrestle with what turns out to be a complicate­d legacy: while Thomas showed great sympathy for some oppressed people, he also participat­ed in, and benefited from, their oppression. His poems, revered in South Africa, are long forgotten elsewhere and feature egregious—perhaps even irresponsi­ble—flights of fancy.

But—being drawn from written works rather than real life, and embarking on their quest over a century after the fact—the characters struggle to complete their mission. Many of the papers Thomas left behind are now lost. The pain of learning that someone they care about may not be who they thought he was lays Hinza and Mary low. Their tenacious but fragile work is a unique way of grappling with the inevitable reassessme­nt that every public figure’s legacy must undergo.

Timely and thought-provoking, Still Life is a novel about the complexiti­es of human compassion and the impermanen­ce of legacies.

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