Paul du Toit het hom in die Verenigde Koninkryk kom vestig nadat hy Suid-Afrika tien jaar tevore onder 'n wolk verlaat het. Nou is hy geskei en middeljarig, verstrengel in 'n vervelige werk en 'n sukkelende verhouding.Hy aanvaar dus geredelik 'n maklike – of so dink hy – opdrag van 'n ryk Londense finansier wat hom na Suid-Afrika terugneem. Maar die land het verander, en die terrein is verraderlik.Skielik moet Paul nie net met die skaduwees van sy eie lewe veg nie, maar ook met die versteekte magte wat Suid-Afrika beheer.
Willem Carel van der Merwe was born on 7 September 1963 in Johannesburg. He attended schools in Johannesburg, Witbank and Cologne, Germany, and graduated from Linden High School in 1981. After completing his military service, he attended Stellenbosch University (1986 B.Acc degree) and the University of Cape Town (1987 GDA). During this time he played lock for the Akker XV, the first Stellenbosch University affiliated rugby team to compete in the then black SARA rugby league. He completed his Chartered Accountant professional exams in 1988, and thereafter worked at Arthur Andersen & Co, in Johannesburg and London. In 1991 he joined Rand Merchant Bank's Corporate Finance Division, and in 1995 he co-founded African Merchant Bank. In 2000 he took up a position in London as an executive director of Comparex, an international IT group. He lived and worked in London for the next six years, completing a part-time MA (Writing) degree (with distinction) during this time. In 2018 he received a Phd in History from Stellenbosch University. In 2004 he published his first short story, The Water Mountains, in an UK short story collection. At the beginning of 2006 he returned to South Africa and settled in Stellenbosch with his wife and two young daughters. In 2007 he published his debut novels, Nasleep and No Man's Land, written by him in Afrikaans and English respectively. No Man's Land was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Prize, as well as the M-Net Literary Award, while Nasleep was shortlisted for the UJ Literary Prize. Nasleep was translated into Dutch and published in Holland in 2010. He also wrote his next novel in both languages, and Shark and Geldwolf were published in 2009. Geldwolf was awarded the Eugene Marais Literary Prize by the SA Academy for Arts and Science and shortlisted for other literary prizes. In 2015 he published his third novel, once again in Afrikaaans and English, as Skaduwee and Shadow respectively. He published Donker Stroom - Eugene Marais en die Anglo-Boereoorlog, his first non-fiction book, in 2015, a critically acclaimed study of Eugene Marais. It was awarded the Protea Boekhuis Prize, as well as the Kyknet-Rapport Prize and the L.W. Hiemstra Prize. It was also short-listed for the SALA non-fiction arward.In 2019 he published a biography of gen. Ben Viljoen, an enigmatic Boer War general. He currently owns and manages an investment and advisory company, Grapetown Capital, and is the chairman of the Stellenbosch Heritage Trust.
Goed begin, maar so halfpad deur het ek belangstelling begin verloor - die arme Paul du Toit se gewroeg het net té veel vir my begin word. Gelukkig het ek aanhou lees want die verhaal het 'n interessante wending geneem en met nogal 'n 'bang' geëindig. Dis baie jammer dat die redigering van die teks so swak is want ek was naderhand so geïrriteerd daarmee dat ek begin foute tel het i.p.v. om die verloop van die verhaal te geniet. Nee, regtig, Umuzi, betaal tog iemand om die manuskrip te versorg - julle kan nie verwag lesers moet betaal vir 'n boek met so baie foute in nie.