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The Swim Team

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When sixteen-year-old Khetiwe is given a swimming scholarship to a Johannesburg private school, she bumps up against Farrah, the swimming captain. As “the poor girl”, Khetiwe is already struggling to fit in, but Farrah sets out to make her life unbearable. When the two girls clash over Aidan – Farrah’s ex-boyfriend – Farrah becomes even more unhinged. The constant bullying is starting to seriously affect Khetiwe, but when she tries to defend herself, things turn out even worse …

263 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 27, 2021

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About the author

Catherine Jarvis

3 books8 followers
Catherine teaches English to high school students where she shares her love for writing and Shakespeare. She studied English Literature at the University of the Witwatersrand. Her short stories have been published in the anthology Feast, Famine and Potluck and in the 2015 Jalada anthology. She lives in Johannesburg with her husband and two children. "The Swim Team" is her first novel.

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5 stars
14 (40%)
4 stars
11 (31%)
3 stars
6 (17%)
2 stars
2 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Rosh (_soap_box).
352 reviews12 followers
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June 7, 2026
3.5 🌟

A perfect book about a teenage girl learning that success doesn't only mean being in white spaces. We follow Khethiwe a swimmer who gets a scholarship to a prestigious all girls school who has to navigate the pressure of being a poor talented black girl at a white institution. It covers a lot of topics that are crucial is south africa right now; xenophobia, racism and the pressure to be an 'expecionally good black person' when around white people.

Khethiwe makes mistakes and I appreciated seeing that because most teenage girls would do the exact same thing and it should be normal to give black girls some grace and room to just be.


Profile Image for Charles Siboto.
Author 5 books6 followers
January 5, 2022
The Swim Team is a great YA novel that shows the wide gap between rich and poor in South Africa and how much we still have to do with our race and gender relations. The characters are appealing (or deliciously despicable in Farrah’s case). The story comes across in the style of things like Gossip Girl and Pretty Little Liars, which is great because it’s cheesy and dramatic. The Swim Team tackles issues of white privilege, bullying, sexism and xenophobia in a way that it doesn’t bog itself down with the issues but it does make a point of addressing them.
Profile Image for Dino.
1 review
December 17, 2021
Great read!

Really enjoyed this well written and topical novel. The story provides a first-hand account of the many social issues in South Africa driven by extreme inequality. The characters are intriguing and the plot gripping.
Profile Image for Robyn.
371 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2021
I thoroughly enjoyed this South African Young Adult debut novel by Catherine Jarvis. A highly relevant book which deals with issues such as race and class in a delicate and understandable way. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Sanet Odendaal.
Author 1 book1 follower
January 11, 2025
So good!

From one English teacher to another: Wow! Excellent read, accurately portraying the real struggles of learners in South Africa. Loved it!
Profile Image for Bo Solem.
2 reviews
March 27, 2026
my main issue about the book that itched the whole way through was how Jarvis communicated the weight of being a black girl in swimming. what she did right was know the weight was there to begin with, she acknowledged it. What she didn’t do was express why Khetiwe felt this pressure, isolation, etc. Khetiwe says that she has to represent as a black girl, yes that’s correct but there’s no core understanding of why. Reasons why would be “I was given a great opportunity,” or, “I have to represent my people well in a white dominated field,” or “I wanna inspire other black girls who never felt represented,” or just, “I’m represent all my black ancestors who never got the chance, I do this for them,”. My mother constantly reminds me of things like this which puts me under pressure in everything I do. That would add so much weight to her actions, defiance or her misconducts because she’d indirectly feel like she’s failing her people, not just herself.
Profile Image for Olivia S.
2 reviews1 follower
February 25, 2023
Complete page turner, I really enjoyed this book :) to be fair I may be a bit biased, my aunt wrote this book but still loved it
Profile Image for Luke Calder.
Author 1 book6 followers
May 7, 2024
An engaging read about conniving mean girls and petty rivalries set within the delicate social issues that surround Johannesburg schools.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews