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She wants a future - is that too much? This Thing Called the Future, the multiple-award-winning young-adult novel from J.L. Powers, is finally coming to South Africa, its country of origin. The book is set in Imbali, the sprawling township outside Pietermaritzburg. Khosi is fourteen years old. She lives with her grandmother and her little sister, Zi. Both her parents tell her of the past, about a time when hundreds of Imbali residents were killed in political violence. Khosi wants a future; she wants to help make South Africa a better place. Is that too much in an environment where some men believe that raping virgins, like Khosi, will cure them of AIDS? Meanwhile, Khosi has fallen in love and really, really just wants to experience that warm, fuzzy feeling that happens when Little Man, the handsome boy in her class, touches her hand. In a world where HIV and AIDS are treatable for those with money and access to good state-sponsored care, Khosi has to negotiate hours in clinic lines, vengeful men, her mother's disdain for traditional healers, her grandmother's faith in their sangoma, and the terrible curse her next-door neighbour has cast on their household. This beautifully crafted young-adult novel never preaches and never falls into the trap of “warning” teenagers against anything. It simply deals with the realities of township life and the hardships a young virgin faces. This Thing Called the Future has won several prizes in the USA. LAPA and Catalyst Press are proud to bring it back to its country of origin.
Can she raise a sibling and finish school? When her beloved grandmother dies, 17-year-old Khosi must learn to survive on her own. She has to take care of her little sister, Zi, while making a living as a traditional healer, and somehow try to finish school. When violence flares up again in Imbali, the township near Pietermaritzburg, Khosi finds herself at the centre of the storm. A taxi war threatens the safety of every person in Imbali, including Khosi's best friend and boyfriend, Little Man. The body of a murdered man is dumped on her doorstep. Accusations of witchcraft swirl around her, despite her every effort to keep her healing practice above board. When Little Man chooses the wrong path, Khosi builds a new romance, but her past might catch up with her. This is the sequel to Powers' award-winning novel This Thing Called the Future. In Under Water, we meet Khosi three years after the end of the first book. Can Khosi be a part of change in her community? And can she raise her sister while finishing school? There are few young-adult books that deal with raising a sibling. This one tackles that situation head on. Under Water is the sequel to This Thing Called the Future, a multiple-award-winning young-adult book that is being published in South Africa at the same time as Under Water. In the first book Khosi hears about, and experiences, feelings of being trapped under water while the ancestors try to speak to her. The sequel explains her journey into the future.
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Bait the Toad
Kendra Powers; Compiled by M. A. Powers, J. L. Powers
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R281
Discovery Miles 2 810
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Amina lives on the edges of Mogadishu. Her family's house has been
damaged in Somalia's long civil war, but they continue to live
there, reluctant to leave their home. Amina's world is shattered
when government forces come to arrest her father because his art
has been officially censored, deemed too political. Then rebel
forces kidnap Amina's brother, forcing him to become a soldier in
Somalia's brutal ongoing war. Although her mother and grandmother
are still with her, Amina feels vulnerable and abandoned. Secretly,
she begins to create her own artwork in the streets and the
derelict buildings to give herself a sense of hope and to let out
the burden of her heart. Her artwork explodes into Mogadishu's
underground world, providing a voice for people all over the city
who hope for a better, more secure future. 'This touching story
brings home vividly the dangers of creating art that seeks to be
true - and all the more so during a vicious civil war, interwoven
with religious extremism. Thankfully, Amina's teenage curiosity and
courage also signal hope.' - Beverley Naidoo, author of Carnegie
Medal Winner The Other Side of Truth
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Broken Circle (Paperback)
J. L. Powers, M. A. Powers
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R388
R362
Discovery Miles 3 620
Save R26 (7%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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