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207 pages, Paperback
Published March 20, 2018
MY FATHER’S EYES
CURIOSITY KILLED THE CAT
MOVING LANDMARK
ROPED IN
AVALON
NAILED
TURBULENCE
WHISTLE-BLOWERS AND VUVUZELAS
PRIVATE DANCER SAUDADE
EVERY DOG HAS ITS DAY
SOWETO, UNDER THE APRICOT TREE
SUMMARY
“This apricot tree has multiple souls that fill me with wonder every morning
and enchant me by afternoon. This tree has bittersweet memories, just like
the fruit it bears.”
If the apricot trees of Soweto could talk, what stories would they tell?
Acclaimed writer Niq Mhlongo’s second short story collection provides an
imaginative answer to this question. It is imbued with a strong sense of place
as it captures the vibrancy of the township and its surrounds. Told with his
characteristic satirical flair, life and death are intertwined in these tales where
funerals and the role of the ancestors feature strongly; where cemeteries are
convenient places to meet old friends, show off your new car and catch up on
the latest gossip.
Naledi visits a cemetery in search of her father, and Bra Makhenzo, with his
kick-and-bhoboza shoes and rising debt, uses a funeral to propagate his
politics. A cat’s burial features in one story and in another a missing dog
returns when his owner is laid to rest under mysterious circumstances. Then
there is the MEC who is fascinated by his mistress’s manicure, the
zamazamas running underground settlements, a homeless man who does not
want to be saved and a mob of soccer fans ready to mete out a bloody justice.
Take your seat under the apricot tree and let a born storyteller enthral you
with tales that are both entertaining and thought-provoking.