TW: sexual assault, incest, physical violence, emotional abuse, alcohol abuse, racism, misogyny, child abuse, murder.
Not for the faint-hearted. I'm very, very glad I finally read this after it languished on my TBR pile for a decade but I need something much lighter next.
Triomf, for the uninitiated, was once a vibrant, cultural hub in Johannesburg. The jazz capital of Jo'burg, the New Orleans of South Africa. It was razed to the ground in February 1955 to make way for a whites-only neighbourhood and, in an act of unspeakable cynicism, the town was renamed Triomf, 'triumph' in Afrikaans.
Triomf is about a poor, white Afrikaans family, of which three are on disability and one is the breadwinner. The family live in fear and anticipation of the changes that will come in April 1994 when the country will vote for change.
I spent 20 years of my life within 10km of Triomf and knew many people like the desperately poor Benade family at the heart of this novel. Poor, working class, uneducated and desperate. They were meant to be given a leg-up by the Apartheid regime but became a lasting casualty of it long before Apartheid ended.
I knew people like this. Violent, offensive, alcoholic people. There's very little to like in this novel and only one redeeming character (Mary, in case you're wondering, maybe Toby the dog, too).
I felt constantly triggered reading this novel. I lived for years in a house where poverty defined us, that notion that if something was lost, broken or damaged, it was never, ever getting replaced, fixed or thrown away. We too struggled from generational poverty, where you're lucky, genuinely so, if you can ever get out.
Relating so deeply to this difficult book, both in my own experiences growing up and in the people I met, is why it gets five out of five stars, I can't recommend this book - if you're interested in the themes raised, give it a go.