Sometimes There Is a Void: Memoirs of an Outsider
Zakes Mda
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year
"Moving, funny... Here is a man looking back on his life and country with joy and sorrow."--John Freeman, The Boston Globe South African novelist and playwright Zakes Mda's remarkable life story of growing up in South Africa, Lesotho, and America, told with style and gusto. The most acclaimed South African writer of his generation, Zakes Mda's novels venture far beyond the conventional narratives of a people's struggle against apartheid. In this memoir, he tells of a life that intersects with the politics of his country--a story that is, at its heart, the classic adventure of an artist, lover, and bon vivant. Living in exile with his father in Basutoland (now Lesotho) during the first pangs of his country's independence, a series of brutal and poignant initiations ushered him toward the life of a writer--and that of a perpetual outsider. Through the indignity of Boer racism, the turmoil of the Soweto uprisings, not to mention three marriages and his eventual immigration to America, Mda struggled to remain his own man. With Sometimes There Is a Void, he shows that independence opened the way for the stories of individual South Africans in all their variety.Product Details
Price
$28.00
$26.04
Publisher
Farrar Straus Giroux
Publish Date
January 08, 2013
Pages
576
Dimensions
5.76 X 8.64 X 1.48 inches | 1.47 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781250023988
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
Zakes Mda is a professor of creative writing at Ohio University. He has been a visiting professor at both Yale and the University of Vermont. Among his novels, The Heart of Redness (FSG, 2002) won the Richard Wright Zora Neale Hurston Legacy Award. He lives in Johannesburg, South Africa, and Athens, Ohio.
Reviews
"A gregarious and transfixing memoir... Chronicles the upheavals that have sharpened Mda's skills as a wide-ranging social observer." --Rob Nixon, The New York Times Book Review
"Fascinating... During my five-year stint as Africa bureau chief for The Christian Science Monitor, I struggled in vain to find a memoir like this one." --Scott Baldauf, The Christian Science Monitor "It is easy to become immersed in this memoir... Mda's deeper struggles parallel those of all South Africans seeking identity and freedom." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) "Remarkably gorgeous, urgent, poetic... It's been a long time since I have been so undone and remade by another person's words." --Alexandra Fuller, author of Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight