Jonathan Amid on ‘Gebeente’ on RSG’s programme Skrywers en boeke (Afrikaans channel, national radio)

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Skrywers en boeke, 3 Januarie 2024

“Die laaste boek wat ek wil uitsonder, is ’n boek wat ek baie onlangs gelees het. Ek is ’n groot Etienne van Heerden-aanhanger. Ek sien altyd uit na die nuwe boek wat Etienne van Heerden vir ons (…) bring en met Gebeente dink ek: Hy het homself oortref. Ek dink hierdie boek (…) ten spyte daarvan dat hy heelwat korter is as Die biblioteek aan die einde van die wêreld (…) het ’n absolute trefkrag wat jou net oorweldig. Die boek is groot; dis groots. Die prosa is vol spierkrag. Dit is vernuwend en slim. Dis ’n uitdagende vertelling. Dis totaal onvoorspelbaar. Die manier (…) Etienne van Heerden met taal werk en met taal speel en ons uitdaag om ons manier van dink en ons manier van sien van die wêreld en hoe ons besin oor menswees en kennis en jy weet, waar ons heen op pad is as die mensdom, jy weet, hoe hy hierdie vrae vir ons vra in hierdie roman is iets verbysterend. Ek was regtig baie beïndruk en dis ’n boek wat by ’n mens spook (…) Jy maak die laaste bladsy toe en jy dink oukei, ek is nou klaar gelees, en dan kom die karakters weer so voor jou in jou geestesoog (…) So ek was baie beïndruk met Gebeente. Ek dink dis ’n boek wat wonderlik by ’n ander roman soos Toorberg aansluit (…) Ek is regtig baie in my skik met hierdie boek.”

Listen to the podcast below.

‘Gebeente’, Christmas 2023

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Etienne van Heerden on Facebook: “Terwyl ’n vriendelike boer op die Vergete Grootpad groenvoer gee vir die takbokke en die slee onder ’n doringboom rus, haal Vader Krismis sy keps vir ’n wyle af, kyk op na die versengende son, fluister ‘Jingle bells’, sit sy knypbrilletjie op en lees nog ’n hoofstuk uit Gebeente.”

‘A Library to Flee’ on The Best African Writing ‘Five Books Expert Recommendations’ list

Excerpt from interview

Sophie Roell: Let’s go on to A Library to Flee, by Etienne Van Heerden. I think this was written in Afrikaans and then translated.

Mphuthumi Ntabeni: Yes, it was translated into English last year. There is something that we call here the UJ Prize for Translation, which is awarded by the University of Johannesburg. The translator, Henrietta Rose-Innes, won that prize this year. It’s quite exciting.

The genre of this book is the most popular one at the moment. Now, let me first make you understand what kind of a genre it is. There is this thing that is happening now, especially in South Africa, whereby stories are also set in some global cities outside of South Africa. And we’re no longer only looking west; apparently, we’re also looking east, so there are a lot of stories now that are set in China. This one is part of that movement: It’s partly set in China, and generally set in South Africa.

The most popular one in this genre at this particular moment is C. A. Davids’s How to Be a Revolutionary. I’m sure you would have heard of it because it’s published in the UK by Verso. It has won quite a lot of prizes in South Africa: the Sunday Times Literary Award and the UJ Prize for Writing in English.

But what I like more about Etienne Van Heerden’s one, A Library to Flee, is that I find it’s a little bit more nuanced and the prose has got more finesse to it. It follows a Black woman who comes across some kind of data harvesting business. She realises that her father is involved in this, and there’s some corruption because it involves the government during the Zuma years of our presidency. It follows the sniff of this corruption to China, and that’s where tragedy strikes.

What I love most about it also is that it’s got a lot of diverse characters: a Xhosa woman, an Afrikaner man, an English man. It mixes and intermixes these characters together and it all comes to a very beautiful ending – I can’t mention it, but it’s plotted very well. It’s got a very surprising ending. It’s a thick book, but actually, by the end, it rewards your patience.

SR: It’s about 600 pages, isn’t it?

MN: Yes, it’s a very long book. It helps that the prose is written in pleasing poetic flashes, so you hang in there. I can understand how readers might be discouraged because it’s got a lot going on initially, but if you have patience, the plot has got a very pleasing, rewarding end, where it brings everything together.

SR: But you wouldn’t describe it as a crime novel, even though it starts with a murder?

MN: It mixes a lot of genres. It’s a spy novel also; it eavesdrops on history. It’s got a lot of things going on. And then, it’s contemporary in the sense that it interrogates how AI will affect us, especially security clusters because of the cameras on the streets, the cameras in shopping malls. Also, it showcases – it’s almost a legal drama in itself – arguments about how ethical data harvesting itself is.

Click here to read Sophie Roell’s full interview with Mphuthumi Ntabeni.