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The authors spent time finding out how South African women respond to this phenomenon referred to as 'over 40'. The result is a title that a woman would give to herself, to a friend or to a daughter going through this 'big' transition period that involves psychological and physiological change that brings about much contemplation. 'Fabulously 40 and beyond' is written primarily from an extensive base of questionnaires as well as from feedback from media work during the book's development. The authors then synthesised and wrote this title from an extensive base of questionnaires and from feedback from media work to bring on important themes including identity, spirituality, body, family and other animals, leisure (and pleasure). At the centre is a certain power that women come into as they move into their 40's and beyond which is a clear measure of where women in their 40s are at. Clearly, the title demonstrates that these women have humour, lightness, know how much they own, and do juggle things to get things in life to go the way they want. The book offers practical advice as well as relevant statistics. During the research phase 'Fabulously 40 and beyond' saw much media interest including a feature on SAFM Otherwise, in Femina magazine and on Radio 702. This is no doubt a much-needed book that fills a gap dealing with this often difficult or traumatic stage in women's lives.
Love and Fury is the compelling and intimate account of the life, loves and furies of Margie Orford. In this brave memoir, the renowned South African crime writer divulges some of the harrowing experiences that have shaped her life and influenced her writing. Through sexual assault, divorce, depression and personal loss, Orford illuminates the trauma she has navigated. Tender and courageous chapters vividly recall memories of what she has been through as a woman, mother, wife, feminist and ambitious writer. Love and Fury shows why trauma in our past can have such an enduring and debilitating effect on women’s lives. It also unpacks the healing power of love, creativity, courage and self-reflection, ultimately offering a profound message of hope and joy for any woman who has ever questioned themselves, their trauma and who they are in the world. This book is every woman’s love and fury.
An extremely sharp, well-written female revenge thriller that looks at trauma and the complicated ways in which it manifests. Cora carries secrets her daughter can’t know. Freya is frightened by what her mother leaves unsaid. Angel will only bury the past if it means putting her abusers into the ground. One act of violence sets three women on a collision course, each desperate to find the truth – but the people they love are not what they seem.
When a beautiful young woman is found murdered on Cape Town’s Sea Point
promenade, investigative journalist and criminal profiler Dr Clare Hart
is drawn into the web of a brutal serial killer. As more bodies are
discovered, Clare is forced to revisit memories of the horrific rape of
her twin sister and the gang ties that bind Cape Town’s crime rings.
Are her investigations into human trafficking really linked to the
murders or is the killer just playing sick games with her?
When danger lies in the eye of the beholder, what happens when you reject its pull? Cora carries secrets her daughter can't know. Freya is frightened by what her mother leaves unsaid. Angel will only bury the past if it means putting her abusers into the ground. One act of violence sets the three women on a collision course, each desperate to find the truth. In a nail-biting thriller set between the scorched red soil of South Africa, the pitiless snowfields of Canada and the chilly lochsides of western Scotland, each woman must contend with the spectres of male violence, sexual abuse and the choices we each make to keep our souls.
How to make sense of love, relationships and death in a world torn apart by HIV and Aids. For information in French click here
A dog scavenging in an illegal building site digs up a bone. A human
bone. She drags it back to where her mistress lies dead in an abandoned
shed, but there are hundreds more. Skeletons which have lain
undisturbed for centuries beneath Gallows Hill, where Cape Town's
notorious gibbets once stood. In the burial grounds Gallows Hill,
investigative journalist and criminal profiler Dr Clare Hart looks into
a cold case: the skeleton of a young woman murdered twenty years. At
the same time, she is helping a troubled young artist, Sophie Brown,
identify a malicious stalker. The two are linked, and both Clare and
Sophie are in grave danger. Clare discovers that the young woman’s
remains discovered near Gallows Hill are Astrid Brown’s, Sophie’s
mother, who has been missing for two decades. Her murderer is now
stalking Sophie, and if needs be he will kill again. And again. In
fact, he will kill as often as it takes to hide the secret he so neatly
buried with Sophie’s mother these last twenty years.
The gruesome murder of a homeless teenage boy suggests a methodical
serial killer is at work in Walvis Bay, a depressed port, isolated in
the vast sweep of the Namib Desert. Corrupt and claustrophobic, the
shifting population of Walvis Bay consists of transients and vagabonds
– people with no future and no past. When it seems that the serial
killer may be working undetected in this pit of darkness and
desperation, investigative journalist and criminal profiler Dr Clare
Hart is brought in to investigate. Tangled up in her own doomed love
affair, Clare is happy for the distraction – until it becomes clear
that it is really her life at stake.
When an emaciated little girl is found on an icy Cape mountainside,
investigative journalist and criminal profiler Dr Clare Hart is baffled
that no one has reported her missing. Where does she come from, who
does she belong to? In another troubling turn of events, a distraught
man approaches Clare to help him locate his granddaughter, a gifted
cellist who has abandoned her music scholarship and been seduced by a
cultish religious community and its charismatic leader. In a race
against time, Clare battles to unravel the two cases which she
discovers are connected in ways too horrifying to fathom.
She tells herself an hour is not so long to wait, and steps outside.
The street is empty. Then she hears the car. She keeps still. That
saves you if you are in danger. Her daddy says so. Friday evening. A
deserted street below Table Mountain. A six year-old ballerina waits
alone for her mother to fetch her. Then an unmarked car approaches, and
she is gone. Captain Riedwaan Faizal is a member of Cape Town’s elite
Gang Unit. Tough and streetwise, he is used to being a target. But when
the danger of his anti-gang war envelops his only daughter and he
becomes the prime suspect in her abduction, there is little he can do.
He turns to Dr Clare Hart, investigative journalist and criminal
profiler. Their desperate search for the missing child, whose chances
of survival diminish with each hour, unravels a web of deception and
danger that puts all their lives at terrible risk.
When a beautiful young woman is found murdered on Cape Town's Seapoint promenade, police profiler Dr Clare Hart is drawn into the web of a brutal serial killer. As more bodies are discovered, Clare is forced to revisit memories of the horrific rape of her twin sister and the gang ties that bind Cape Town's crime rings. Are her investigations into human trafficking really linked to the murders or is the killer just playing sick games with her?
When I first arrived at Groot Drakenstein Prison I saw fifteen prisoners, reduced to a brutal sameness by the orange or the blue uniforms, by the obedient way in which incarcerated men shuffled from one place to another at the order of a guard, by my own fear of them. Nine months later, I have piles of handwritten stories and poetry on my desk. The paper carries with it the unique smell of the prison: a dusty grey hopelessness of lives turned to ash. It turns the stomach. And yet the writing speaks to me of a quiet heroism. These fifteen men turned up at the page, so to speak, every day. They resisted the inertia that creeps into the bones and turns one’s knees to water when one thinks of twenty-five, thirty years in the same small scrap of space and wrote. That slow, carefully accumulated effort has produced this book. Writing demands that one go to the dark places of the mind and face them. The writing in this collection speaks of the places and experiences rarely glimpsed, rarely represented in our fractured and violent society. Evident in many of the pieces is a reaching back for lost goodness and terrible grief for that lost self, for that other life not lived.
When danger lies in the eye of the beholder, what happens when you reject its pull? Cora carries secrets her daughter can't know. Freya is frightened by what her mother leaves unsaid. Angel will only bury the past if it means putting her abusers into the ground. One act of violence sets the three women on a collision course, each desperate to find the truth. In a nail-biting thriller set between the scorched red soil of South Africa, the pitiless snowfields of Canada and the chilly lochsides of western Scotland, each woman must contend with the spectres of male violence, sexual abuse and the choices we each make to keep our souls.
Little Red Hen is feeling peckish and decides to make bread; she asks her friends for help but they all refuse. Will she have to do everything by herself? Engaging and beautifully illustrated, this story teaches children the importance of lending a helping hand and the value of sharing. A retelling of a beloved children's fable, this story reflects African contexts while maintaining the universal appeal of the original.
A poor fisherman and his brother live in a grass hut by the sea. One day, the fisherman catches a magic talking fish, which he immediately sets free. He tells his brother what has happened and his brother demands that he go and ask the magic fish for a bigger house. The magic fish grants the fisherman's wish. Will his brother be satisfied or will he be greedy and ask for more?
Walvis Bay is a depressed and isolated port on the edge of the Namib Desert. Corrupt and claustrophobic, its shifting population consists of transients and vagabonds--people with no future and no past. When it seems that a methodical serial killer may be working undetected in this pit of darkness and desperation, police profiler Dr. Clare Hart is brought in to investigate. Tangled up in her own doomed love affair, Clare is happy for the distraction--until it becomes clear that it is really her life at stake. This enthralling procedural is perfect for fans of Patricia Cornwell and Kathy Reichs.
When an emaciated child is found on an icy Cape mountainside, profiler Dr Clare Hart is baffled that no one has reported her missing. Where does she come from, who does she belong to? To further complicate matters, a distraught man pleads with Clare to find his missing granddaughter, Rosa, a gifted but troubled young cellist who has abandoned her music scholarship. In a race against time, Clare battles to unravel the two cases and locate the missing Rosa. As winter tightens its grip, she is confronted by chilling secrets in a context where criminals act with increasing impunity and the police can no longer be trusted. Amidst the frenzy of the investigation, Clare must also bear a secret of her own. Water Music is a page-turner with a masterly plot that will keep you reading to the last sentence. It is the fifth novel in Margie Orford’s Clare Hart series, which has been published to international acclaim.
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