This short story collection, quite imperceptibly resembles the tale "July's People" also written by the 1991 Nobel Prize laureate, whose own young life was intermingled with the webbed and uneasy politics of the apartheid run South Africa, and whilst so doing it, in the two stories I have read, most notably "Country Lovers", describes a seemingly honest encounter between two unsuspecting people, devoid of the knowledge to save themselves from the destruction and the separation their primitive lives know very little about.
Full of esoteric fauna and flora, so much that you can feel and taste the landscape- then again, Gordimer, like her predecessors, Wiccomb and Bassie Head, are natural minds of such vivid and incomparable will to detail and illusion; capturing readers at some point of the other- magic makers in other words.
It would be a conscious, ahem, a conscience crime not to read at least one story out of this bible of South African history, related poignantly by the hand of a woman, who carried and fought the resistance, at first hand.