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Book chat – Page 2 – Stellenbosch University Language Centre

Category: Book chat

Book chat with Ammie H

Get to know us through the books we read! Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Ammie Henson, one of the coordinators of the Intensive English portfolio and an English second language (ESL) instructor.

“My journey to become a teacher has taken me down very interesting, and sometimes difficult, roads – but I believe it shaped me into the teacher I am today. I started off as a psychology student at Stellenbosch University and somehow ended up studying journalism as a postgraduate at Rhodes University after a gap year in the United States. I also went to Finland on an exchange programme for my master’s degree in media studies; the most valuable experience of my life.”

“I have always loved children and have known in my heart that I am meant to be a teacher – but I didn’t listen way back when! Somehow, I always ended up back in childcare: from working as an au pair to being a primary school class assistant. I eventually decided to do my TEFL certificate at the Stellenbosch University Language Centre and applied to work at the Language Centre while I complete my BEd (Foundation Phase) at North-West University (finally!). Teaching is my passion. ​

I love teaching because I want to instil a sense of self-worth in my students – I want them to be proud of who they are and of their accomplishments. There is nothing more satisfying than when students realise what their potential is and utilise it. I also love inspiring my students – and to be inspired by them!​ Other than being a teacher, I am also a Libra who loves beautiful things and organising events and parties. I am a dog mom to two rescues, one of whom came all the way from Grahamstown! I like spending time outdoors and prefer working out in nature – I love hiking and swimming. In my free time I play Dungeons & Dragons and spend time with my friends and family. I’m not much of a bookworm, but I do love a good story.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that had a great impact on you, or a book that is memorable for some reason?
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
This book and I have a long history, and it reminds me of someone very dear to me. I remember reading this book for the first time in Afrikaans when I was really young – probably in my early primary school days. I don’t think I was emotionally and cognitively ready to grasp the real meaning of this book at that age. I didn’t like the book and found it scary. I didn’t finish it back then. As I got older, I became aware of its hype and popularity. In 2015 the trailer for the film was released. I have a deep appreciation for beautiful animation, and I was immediately in love. I saw the film with my best friend in December that year, a few weeks before my trip to Finland, and knew I had to read the book. I was in awe of the story, the characters and the life lessons (also, the animation was fantastic). I came home after the film and told my stepdad, Nic, all about it. The next day I was colouring in at my desk when he placed the book next to me. Inside he wrote (translated from Afrikaans): “If the sun doesn’t shine enough over there, know that we are proud of you”. He signed it with the letters KTLO, which stand for “Kick the lights out!” – the saying with which he always encouraged my sister and myself. He was our biggest supporter supporter.

I read the book on my flight to Helsinki and finished reading it while queuing for the soundcheck of the 5 Seconds of Summer Sounds Live Feels Live concert. Last year I read my favourite excerpt at his funeral.

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So the little prince tamed the fox. And when the hour of his departure drew near –

“Ah,” said the fox, “I shall cry.”

“It’s your own fault,” said the little prince. “I never wished you any sort of harm; but you wanted me to tame you …”

“Yes, that is so,” said the fox.

“But now you’re going to cry!” said the little prince.

“Yes, that is so,” said the fox.

“Then it has done you no good at all!”

“It has done me good,” said the fox, “because of the colour of the wheat fields.”

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Who is (are) your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why?
I don’t really have a favourite author. I have preferred genres: fantasy, adventure, mystery, romance, drama, historical fiction and comics. And preferred characters: strong, fully formed female characters with a voice!

Books normally find me, not the other way around, so it doesn’t matter who a book is written by, as long as the story it tells is compelling.

What are you reading at the moment?
The Practical Magic series by Alice Hoffman.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
Definitely physical books with paper pages. It is a love story in itself.

What book have you re-read? Also tell us why?
I have reread some of the Harry Potter books because I read them when I was really young. But there’s nothing like reading a book for the very first time. It is never the same once that spell has been broken.

Who is your favourite literary character?
The fox from The Little Prince (especially when he is voiced by James Franco).

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us (if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already)?
To be honest, the whole of The Little Prince is an important life lesson. But this quote by the fox stood out to me the most:

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And now here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”

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What book/books would you recommend to your friends, students or anyone else?
The Little Prince is a must read for young and old.

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Book chat with Sabrina T

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Sabrina Thompson, a writing skills workshop presenter at the Writing Lab and junior lecturer in Advanced Family Law for the Department of Private Law at the Faculty of Law. Her areas of study and her passions are gender and children’s rights law. She completed her LLM cum laude last year and hopes to pursue a PhD in children’s rights law.

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that had a great impact on you, or a book that is memorable for some reason?
My first love and port of call has to be the Harry Potter books by JK Rowling. My mom started to read them to me when I was about six years old. There are so many other books that I love: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald, Humble Pie by Gordon Ramsay, Sorted by Jackson Bird, The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antionio Iturbe … the list just goes on.

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
There are many lessons to be learned from the Harry Potter series. The greatest one I have taken to heart is to never give up something that you believe in and want to fight for. Harry Potter contains thoroughly adult themes that are conveyed in a gripping and clever way to children. I’m thinking of what Dumbledore says in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, as an example: “‘Happiness can be found, even in the darkest of times, if one only remembers to turn on the light.” In times of self-doubt I always go back to my Harry Potters.

Who is (are) your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why.
I have too many beloved authors to name them all! I love Lucinda Riley, Kirsten Hannah and Jojo Moyes for easy reading. All three of them provide for escapism and are generally an enjoyable read which does not require intensive thinking. I also love Jackson Bird, William Shakespeare, Jane Austin, Anastasia Thomson and so many others, including the classics as well as biographies … and let’s not forget the romance category!

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
Without a doubt physical books. There is something about handling the pages of a book that makes it a special experience. I also think that feeling the physical weight in your hand acts like an anchor between the imaginary world you have entered and the real one. That physical object forms a lasting link.

What book have you re-read? Also tell us why.
Honestly … all of them. It happens rarely that I read a book only once. My bookshelf is a source of pride to me, and I rearrange it periodically. I like to call it my own mini library.

Who is your favourite literary character?
Harry Potter, without a doubt.

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us (if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already)?

Again, the Harry Potter books have taught me that you must be who you are and not give up when things become difficult.

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Something else that the series has brought home to me is that it’s okay to be imperfect and to make mistakes, as long as you learn from them.”

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What book or books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else?
Well, in addition to the Harry Potter series, anything written by Lucinda Riley and Jojo Moyes, and the modern classics such as To Kill a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee and The Beautiful and the Damned by F Scott Fitzgerald. I would recommended that you pay attention to any book that captures your interest – likely, there is something you need to hear from its pages.

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Book chat with Vernita B

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Vernita Beukes, a lecturer and coordinator of language acquisition courses at the Language Centre. She says: “I honestly have the best job in the world! As part of my job, I get the opportunity to teach international students from everywhere in the world Afrikaans. There’s a lot of truth in the saying that if one does something you are passionate about, you won’t need to work a single day in your life! I’m also involved in the reading project of the Vriende van Afrikaans. Here I get the opportunity to read children’s books to pre-school children! How lucky am I?”

Vernita loves her  husband, her dog, family and friends, and reading and travelling are at the top of the list of things she likes doing. “But I absolutely detest tomatoes,” she confesses.

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that left a deep impression on you, or a book that you found unforgettable for some reason or another?
Reading has always been part of my life. My mother read to us every day. I also had wonderful teachers from Sub A (Grade one) onwards, who encouraged my love for books and reading. When I was a student teacher, Dr Anker read The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry to us. Over and above his beautiful voice, the truths in that book also made an indelible impression on me.

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
The section on page 72 (in my copy of the book) became my own philosophy of life. That is where the fox explains to the Little Prince that it is only with one’s heart that one can truly see. That which is really important cannot be seen with one’s eyes.

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I try hard to look at and listen to people with my heart.”

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Who is (are) your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why?
I have many favourite authors, because I feel that different authors appeal more to one in different stages of your life. Jojo Moyes has touched me to the point of ugly crying, and John Grisham, Clive Cussler and Sofia Segovia has made me disappear into their worlds.

What are you reading at the moment?
I’m reading two books: The Help by Kathryn Stockett, and The Murmur of Bees by Sofia Segovia.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
Nothing, but nothing at all, can beat the smell of a new book!

What book have you reread? Also tell us why?
The Little Prince, among others, because it is my favourite book and the truths it contains have a fresh impact on me every time I read it.

Who is your favourite literary character?
Claire Randall in the Outlander series. I think living in Scotland could work for me too!

What book or books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else?

  • The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes
  • Evening Class by Maeve Binchy
  • Sophie’s World by Jostein Gaarder
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Book chat with Helga S

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Helga Sykstus. Helga manages the Language Centre’s Language Learning Hub and is a specialist in the field of language acquisition in Afrikaans. She also presents academic literacies modules.

“I have been sharing my passion for Afrikaans with my students and clients for 22 years, and also my passion for languages and culture in general. I teach Afrikaans at different levels, from beginner to academic level, and I hope not only to empower people through language, but also to forge links between them.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that left a deep impression on you, or a book that you found unforgettable for some reason or another?
When the Moon is Low by Nadia Hashimi.

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
I’m deeply interested in the stories of Afghan women because their situation is so completely different from my own reality, and I’m particularly inspired by their admirable inner strength, despite their complex and difficult circumstances. In addition, these stories are not merely fictional stories; they are the reality for so many women and children in in Afghanistan.

It is the story of a woman, Fereiba, who has to flee from Kabul with her three children because of persecution by the Taliban. She decides to go to family in London and embarks on a perilous journey through Iran, Turkey and Greece with her three children. However, her eldest son, Saleem, is arrested in Athens and separated from the rest of the family.

This book made me look with new eyes at, especially, the pain and sorrow that go hand in hand with immigration. This story about refugees and migrants who struggle to escape from misery and untimely death encapsulates the reality of what it means to be an immigrant. The author portrays it in a manner that makes a deep impression on the reader and tugs at one’s heartstrings. I often had to put the book aside for a few days because I found it too difficult to continue reading. The story shakes one to the core.

Who is (are) your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why?
Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Isabel Allende because I love their subtle use of magical realism, and Khalid Hosseini for his deep and rich portrayal of Afghanistan.

What are you reading at the moment?
I’m reading Inspire: Life Lessons from the Wilderness by Ben Fogle.

A few years ago, I fell in love with Ben Fogle’s programme, Where the wild men are, about people who have chosen to exchange life in a society for an isolated life in nature. The search for a calmer, less complicated life has always stirred my imagination, and was the reason why I decided to buy this book. Fogle shares his own life lessons as well as those of other people who live closer to nature. He wrote the following message in my book: “Dear Helga. Don’t stop dreaming and take the leap.”

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?Definitely ‘real’ printed books. I want to hold a book, smell its pages, and place it on my bookshelf so that I will always be reminded of the wonderful stories I have read.

What book have you re-read? Also tell us why?
I don’t read books twice – there are too many books to read!

Who is your favourite literary character?
I don’t have a favourite literary character.

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us?
Most books that make an impression on me are about people’s inner strength and resilience, love for others, and a love for culture and nature.

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The lesson I learn from this is to be aware of the small things that happen around me every day and to take them all in properly.”

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What book or books would you recommend to your friends, students or anyone else?

  • The House of Spirits – Isabel Allende
  • Love in the Time of Cholera – Gabriel Garcia Marques
  • The Good Daughter – Jasmin Darznik
  • Salt Houses – Hala Alyan
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns – Khalid Hosseini
  • A Walk Across the Sun – Corban Addison

 

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Book chat with Jackie vW

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Jackie van Wyk, an educational interpreter at the Language Centre’s Interpreting Service.

“I studied languages at Stellenbosch University and I have been working as a lecturer and educational interpreter at the Language Centre for the past 15 years. I find it tremendously fulfilling to combine my love for languages, communication and teaching in my role as interpreter. I am also interested in personal development, child psychology, entrepreneurship, parenting and music – I play drums.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that had a great impact on you, or a book that is memorable for some reason?
A book that I have never forgotten since having read it for the first time, is The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abissinia, by Samuel Johnson. It was a prescribed book for English Studies in one of my undergraduate years, and I still remember how my two friends and I spent one rainy Saturday studying the book in preparation for the exams. It took us about four hours to take turns reading it out loud to one another, and I remember how the story absorbed me. Today I still sometimes refer to the story of Rasselas – I have even used it in a speech at a wedding!

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
It examines a vital question: Is it possible for a human being to find happiness? It tells the tale of an emperor’s son, Rasselas, who is waiting for his turn to ascend the throne. In the meantime, he lives, with his siblings and many other people, in a kingdom named Happy Valley, where everything is perfect. The scenery is beautiful, wealth, entertainment, happiness and peace abound, and no one needs anything. Despite the fact that this paradise should guarantee happiness, Rasselas is unhappy. He reaches the conclusion that it is this very lack of need that troubles him. As he puts it: “I have already enjoyed too much; give me something to desire.” He and a small group of followers decide to escape from the valley to experience the wide world at first hand. The idea is to be able subsequently to make an informed decision about where he would be happiest. He also makes it his mission to find out who has managed to find true happiness, and searches for it in everyone he meets. After having travelled for more than a year, Rasselas decides to return home. The end is seen as an anti-climax because they had been so unhappy when they left the valley, and had made so many plans to be happy in future. I nevertheless find the ending meaningful. It addresses the idea that one does not find happiness in a place, people, a career, or actions. Happiness is something you establish within yourself, and it can go with you, regardless of where or with whom you are. In actual fact, the story of Rasselas also raises questions about the whole idea of ‘true’ or ‘complete’ happiness in this life.

 

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When all is said in done, life is also a journey: “Distance has the same effect on the mind as on the eye, and while we glide along the stream of time, whatever we leave behind us is always lessening, and that which we approach increasing in magnitude.”

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Who is/are your favourite author(s)?
I don’t have favourite authors, but I enjoy unusual stories where the boundaries between fiction and reality become blurred. I enjoy psychological thrillers, but if I simply wanted to relax, I would never say no to a good old love story.

What are you reading at the moment?
I have two young children and I’m pregnant, so I don’t actually have much time for reading in this phase of my life. But I enjoy watching vlogs on YouTube and I follow a few families, including Bonnie Hoellein, Ellie and Jared, and Elle Lindquist.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
Always real printed books for me, because I already spend so much time in front of a screen.

What book have you re-read?
I have never re-read fiction, but I regularly refer to other non-fiction books such as Groeipyne by Johan van Lill and 5 Tale van die Liefde van Kinders by Gary Chapman and Ross Campbell, and I find it quite valuable to read Ontsluit die Legkaart van die Bybel by Bill Jones on a regular basis.

Who is your favourite literary character?
I don’t really remember characters in stories; more what happened and the details of the interactions.

What book/books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else? 

  • The Seven Days of Peter Crumb by Jonny Glynn
  • Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens
  • The Holiday by Erica James
  • Ontsluit die Legkaart van die Bybel by Bill Jones
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Book chat with Anne-Mari L

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Anne-Mari Lackay of the Writing Lab. Anne-Mari has been working at the Writing Lab since 2001, where she coordinates Writing Lab consultations and serves as a link between the Writing Lab, students, writing consultants, lecturers and other staff members.

“I think that because I also had to study and work under difficult circumstances, my own experiences made me more sensitive to students’ needs. It is important to me to assist them with empathy and to try making things easier for them. I will always stand up for the underdog – the person who gets the short end of the stick – and try to inspire and empower people to help themselves to fulfil their ideals.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that left a deep impression on you, or a book that you found unforgettable for some reason or another?

Although I love reading, I haven’t read something for relaxation in quite a while. One of the books I managed to finish reading without too many interruptions was A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini. It is a heart-wrenching story – so authentic and true to human nature, but it tells us about a reality of which many women in areas controlled by the Taliban can testify. The book made a deep impression on me. I actually felt as if I was fighting those women’s battle alongside them. It was sad to see how those women’s circumstances caused unnecessary friction between them. Eventually they could unite to find a way out despite the unbelievable pain and humiliation.

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
The book had been given to my daughter before she became seriously ill and doctors had to fight to keep her alive. When I started reading it, it was a kind of escape. The book brought home to me the extremely difficult circumstances under which people – especially women – have had to fight for survival, and how they emerge stronger on the other side. Who, then, am I not to tackle my challenges and to make the best of whatever life throws at me? I was able to cry and to rejoice about small victories with the people I got to know.

The book is set in Afghanistan and reflects the hardship and suffering of women in areas controlled by the Taliban. The author describes the surroundings and events incredibly well, so that one can vividly see the story unfolding in one’s mind’s eye. As I had visited Istanbul previously, the book really resonated with me. It made me grateful once again about the way in which we live in our towns and houses here in our country, despite the crime  and corruption.

Who is your favourite author? Also tell us why?
I don’t have one specific favourite author. Authors who open the world for me appeal to me.

Hosseini’s books attract me because they have opened another world for me. I have also read his book The Kite Runner and it had the same impact on my soul as A Thousand Splendid Suns. I prefer authors who can offer me new experiences, and I like reading stories where people who have been hurt and rejected are able to overcome their difficult circumstances and escape back into the sunlight.

Another author whose writing style I like, is John Grisham. In his book The Confession a young black soccer star is found guilty, without sufficient evidence, of murdering a young girl. It is a heart-breaking story where preconceived notions about colour play a role and lead to a young man having to wait for years in prison for his execution. Shortly before his hanging, the guilty person came to the fore and admitted guilt. Unfortunately, no one believed him and the innocent man was still hanged.

I also like authors in the field of psychology who encourage one to do introspection and who help with self-examination. I like guidelines for self-empowerment, such as those provided by Daniel Goleman in Emotional Intelligence. One can take your time reading this book and learning from it.

 

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I have also started reading more about the lives and history of poets and authors like Breyten Breytenbach, Diana Ferrus and Adam Small. I have met the first two in person – this makes it even more special to read about them. They write about apartheid and their respective origins and life journeys. It also made me realise that one’s own story is important and deserves to be written down and read. Dr Diana Ferrus has just been awarded an honorary doctorate in philosophy by Stellenbosch University.”

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What are you reading at the moment?
I’m currently reading Brutal Legacy by Tracy Going, but it is taking me quite a long time – I put it down when it becomes too sad. I’m also reading Noel O’Reilly’s Wrecker –  not really my kind of book. It’s a story about strange people who do strange things. Nonetheless, there are some interesting moments. The people’s customs and their way of talking entice me to continue reading. In addition, I’m busy with two volumes of poetry – Donkerberg/Bloodwood by Dominique Botha and Wonderlike Woorde en Dade by Gameeda Henry (one of our local poets in Pniël).

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
I prefer a printed book. My eyes are definitely not what they used to be and I sit in front of a computer all day long. I want to be able to feel, smell and see my book; to turn the pages, and to put it down and pick it up again.

What book have you re-read? Also tell us why?
I would like to read A Thousand Splendid Suns again – or at least parts of it – one day when I have time. One sometimes forgets exactly what happened, or when reading a book the second time you notice something you had previously interpreted differently.

Who is your favourite literary character?

 

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As a child my most loved young literary character was Pippi Longstocking – and that will never change.”

Dont laugh at me! Pippi Longstocking is a remarkable little girl – exactly the way I would have liked to be at that stage of my life in the small town where I grew up.  An independent, strong little person who tackled the world with all her might. No one could control her. Pippi was clever and fearless and she could do everything she set her heart on. Not even the important police could wield power over her. She believed in herself. No one was as strong as she was!

Roald Dahl’s Matilda also made a lasting impression on me: the little girl who was extremely intelligent and who sought to escape from her monotonous circumstances by reading books. She discovered that she had supernatural powers, which she used to deal with and resolve difficult situations. Of course, all of us would have liked to have supernatural powers to fix everything, put everyone in their place, and overcome difficult situations.

I think characters such as these build one’s personality. Today I still don’t like being pressured to do things. It brings my Pippi manners or supernatural powers to the fore …

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Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us, if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already?
One learns so many life lessons. Tracy Going’s Brutal Legacy helped me to realise that courage and strength are within oneself; that, although things sometimes seem to be impossible and lost, one sometimes has to dig deeply to find that courage, but that it is always there.

Something else that made an impression on me, was when Cathy Park Kelly – I met her in person – explained the meaning of the title of her book, Boiling a Frog Slowly. She compared the painful experiences she had had in life with the reaction of a frog thrown into a pot of boiling water. In such a case, the frog would immediately jump out of the pot, but she is of the opinion that when the water in the pot containing the frog is heated gradually, the frog’s skin adapts to the increasing heat until the frog eventually boils to death. Similarly, a human being can adapt to the most difficult circumstances – in her case, abuse and gender-based violence – but such adaptations often are a survival strategy that could unwittingly destroy one and cause burnout. Her book helped me to begin understanding why women allow their husbands to abuse them and why they are sometimes unable to see a workable way out. The same principle applies to other situations in life to which one gets accustomed without realising how they sweep you away.

When I read the poems of Adam Small and Diana Ferrus, I get insight into the stories of their lives. During the apartheid years, the talented poet Adam Small waged a painful battle against the many injustices he experienced because of being labelled ‘Coloured’ by the authorities. He received acknowledgement for his work only after his death. This also applies to the poems of Breyten Breytenbach, who waged his own battle against apartheid.

 

From the work of Diana Ferrus (and other poets) I learnt, among other things, that it is only when one is older that you understand why certain things happened the way they happened.Things that upset or hurt you when you were a child get a new meaning now, and you are able to see and understand them in a new light. You also understand, with compassion, the actions of your parents and people around you. This made me realise that everyone’s story is important, and that other people who are confronted with the same circumstances can learn from one’s story.”

 

What book or books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else?
At the moment my small bookshelf contains a few books about the abuse of women. They might not be the kind of books you would want to read every day, because their contents are too painful, or sometimes one does not want to know about these painful things. To me it is especially sad to think that it took these authors years to walk away from the abuse and to be able to write about it. I think there are some men who still need to summon up the courage to do so as well.

My list is:

  • Boiling a Frog Slowly by Cathy Park Kelly
  • Brutal Legacy by Tracy Going
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini
  • The Confession by John Grisham

The pandemic gave me time to read more poems and to start writing myself. Some poems are easily understood; in others one has to search for the meaning. Poets write about the past, but also about what is happening now. Sometimes it is difficult to reconcile these two themes in oneself.

If our readers would like to know more about the village of Pniël where I live, they should read the volume of poetry Voetspore (a Pniël anthology). It was written by authors from the village, and tells more about life in Pniël and the customs there.

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Book chat with Eduard dK

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Eduard de Kock, a senior interpreter at the Language Centre’s Interpreting Service and presenter of the Comms Lab short course Crafting confident presentations.

“I’m a huge fan of the typical nerd culture: Dungeons and Dragons, computer games and the more complicated board games. If I were to win a lot of money today, the first item on my shopping list would be a whole lot of computer parts so that I can build my own machine.” At the Interpreting Service, he is also technology coordinator and involved in the portfolio for continuous professional development. In addition, Eduard lectures Science in Context – a module for BSc students in academic literacies and computer skills. Being a voice artist, he also freelances as a radio presenter.

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that left a deep impression on you, or a book that you found unforgettable for some reason or another?
Two books: Magician by Raymond E Feist, and Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman.

Why did these books books make such an impression on you?
I discovered Magician early in high school – I actually only bought it because it had an interesting cover! I still remember the day when I opened this book for the first time and read the words, ‘The storm had broken’, just as it started raining outside. That made me feel obliged to read the whole book, as I have often done since. I eventually had to buy a new copy because the old one had become rather tattered. This book should appeal to readers who like stories such as Lord of the Rings, but as seen from the perspective of two children who grew up in two different worlds – worlds that were at loggerheads with each other.

I will always have a soft spot for Anansi Boys because it was my first exposure to magic realism, where all the old gods and mythical figures still wander the earth. A man realises that he is the son of the spider god Anansi and that he has a brother who has apparently inherited all their father’s powers – mainly to do with practical jokes. This book enabled me to see magic in the mundane.

Who are your favourite authors? Also tell us why?
Undoubtedly Neil Gaiman, for the reasons mentioned above. I also enjoy Chuck Palahniuk’s storytelling: it’s insightful, interesting, and with just enough gallows humour to spark my interest. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Tom Eaton are two authors whose articles and thoughts quite often convince me to look at the other side of the coin.

What are you reading at the moment?
Frank Herbert’s Dune (the recent movie convinced me at long last to explore this cornerstone of science fiction) and The Ascent of Rum Doodle by WE Bowman, which I received as a gift and am enjoying tremendously.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
Strangely enough I prefer a real book when I go to a restaurant on my own. I feel as if people look at me askance if I sit there with a tablet in front of me; as if they’re thinking “Just another person with their eyes glued to a screen.” But when I fly long distances or travel by bus, I choose my Kindle every time, because it easily fits into my bags without being damaged. It has also happened that I get my timing wrong and finish a book too soon – then I simply buy a new one and download it immediately!

What book have you re-read? Also tell us why?
Many of them. Magician and Anansi Boys, of course. Another classic is Good Omens, by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett. Sometimes I can’t stop thinking about a specific scene from a book without being able to remember the rest of the story, and then I read the whole book again. I’m surprised time and again by how much I can remember – and by how much more I’ve forgotten!

Who is your favourite literary character?
I think it would either be David Wong – the main character in a series by Jason Pargin (including John Dies at the End and This Book is Full of Spiders: Seriously, Dude, Don’t Touch It) – who tries his best to keep his head above water in a world that is determined to drown him, or the literary detective Thursday Next in Jasper Fforde’s series The Eyre Affair, Lost in a Good Book and Something Rotten, who works for a task team that polices books and makes sure that the characters behave themselves. 

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us? 

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I think I learnt the most important lesson from my two favourite characters: Yes, life is tough, crazy and often ridiculous, but that’s no excuse for quitting.”

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What book(s) would you recommend to your friends, students and anyone else?
People who wonder about the far-reaching consequences of governments who simply carry on printing money should read When Money Destroys Nations, where Philip Haslam and Russell Lamberti approach this complex subject in an unusually reader-friendly manner.

Those who feel that they are surrounded by fake news and horror stories about diseases and side effects should read Bad Science by Ben Goldacre. We tend to think there is a simple reason why scientific facts are distorted like this, but Goldacre explains in an elegant manner why the broken telephone game is often played with scientific news.

Those who despair anew each time the South African government is embroiled in yet another scandal should seriously consider reading Is it Me or is it Getting Hot in Here: Great Expectations and Boiling Frogs in South Africa by Tom Eaton. This work made me realise how easy it is to lose sight of the remarkable spirit in our country when we are constantly involved in crisis management.

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Book chat with Elzette W

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Elzette Wickens, a language practitioner at the Language Service of the Language Centre. “I edit and translate Afrikaans and English texts for University and external clients. Almost every day, I learn something new, because we receive texts that cover a wide range of subject matter.”

Elzette also handles language queries from clients as well as other quarters. “These often turn into adventures, for people contact us mostly about puzzlers to which they couldn’t find ready solutions elsewhere. I am at my happiest when I feel that I’ve delivered a polished, communicative text or uncoiled a linguistic entanglement.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that left a deep impression on you, or a book that you found unforgettable for some reason or another?
The Christmas Mystery by Jostein Gaarder (author of Sophie’s World).

Why did this book impress you so much?
I had never read another book like that. It’s a story in which the suspense builds up almost imperceptibly, with parallel story lines that are moving in opposite directions. On the one hand this is a fantasy that nevertheless progresses along historical time posts; on the other hand it tells a story set in the “real world” populated by “regular people”. But could it be that the former portrays true reality, which we glimpse one vignette at a time? Reading this book is a gripping carnival that also leaves you with much to mull over. One of the few books that I’ve reread more than once.

Who is/are your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why?
Somerset Maugham, who can capture emotion so powerfully that it seeps into your own mind. PG Wodehouse, for his droll portrayal of a specific slice of society without turning nasty. Ken Follett, for his lovely series set in Mediaeval England and France, brimming with castles, cloisters and swords. Bill Bryson, for packing his prose with information and left-field humour, but above all for Mother Tongue, which is among my all-time favourites. Hergé for the Tintin books and Alba Bouwer’s Rivierplaas series. The winners who would accompany me to the proverbial deserted island are Dr Seuss and Astrid Lindgren. The day that I’ve become bored with them and have outgrown their books, you may switch off the lights.

Sr Seuss Ca in the HatDr Seuss’ Cat in the Hat character (copyright: Random House)

What are you reading at the moment?
I never read only one book at a time. At the moment, I’m dipping in and out of The Missing Link: How handwriting made us who we are, The Queen’s Gambit, My Life with BoB: Flawed heroine keeps book of books, plot ensues, and Common Places: Mythologies of everyday life in Russia. Plus a few others, here and there.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
I am a surprised but committed Kindle fan. I read only news articles on other devices, and printed books only if photos form an important element of the content. Why would you want to hold a heavy object, risk losing your place, not want to look up an interesting word immediately, not want to highlight striking passages with no hassle, not enjoy a built-in reading light … and not like to have all the books that you are reading at the time right there?

 

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Travel light and save a tree!”

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What book have you read more than once? Share with us why.
Jane Austin’s works, especially Pride and Prejudice – must be eight times by now. Tickles me pink without fail. That opening line …

Who is your favourite literary character?
Captain Haddock

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us (if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already)?
Nobody holds the candle to CS Lewis. But I believe this is not the right forum for sharing it. 

What book(s) would you recommend to your friends, students and anyone else?
The list is never-ending, because I read mostly about topics that seem interesting, rather than the works of specific authors. A few:

  • Worldly Goods: A new history of the Renaissance (Lisa Jardine)
  • C’est La Folie (Michael Wright; the content is in English, only the title is French)
  • Travels With My Briefcase (Peter Biddlecombe)
  • Sixty Million Frenchmen Can’t Be Wrong: Why we love France but not the French (Jean Nadeau & Julie Barlow)
  • Rationality: What it is, why it seems scarce, why it matters (Steven Pinker)
  • Shantaram (Gregory David Roberts)
  • Sy Kom met die Sekelmaan (Hettie Smit)
  • Winnie the Witch (Korky Paul & Valerie Thomas)
  • Zanzibar Street (Niki Daly)
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Book chat with Selene D

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Selene Delport, coordinator of writing skills workshops for postgrad students at the  Writing Lab.

Selene joined the Writing Lab as a consultant in 2006. In 2009, she started conducting its writing skills workshops for postgraduate students. “My work at the Writing Lab has afforded me the privilege of travelling to various countries – among others Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ghana, Eswatini and Lesotho. Each country I’ve visited holds a piece of my heart. The Writing Lab, as a liminal and transformative space, has taught me so much,” she says of her workplace. “In particular, I’ve learnt how to help students navigate sometimes very restrictive and silencing institutional structures, without becoming complicit in those structures myself.”

What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that had a great impact on you?
That’s a terrible thing to ask a reader. 😅

I’ve always loved reading. Some of my favourite children’s books are Matyn die Stermannetjie (Lochner de Kock), Huppelkind (WO Kühne), and Grobbelaartjie van Velskoendorp (Oscar Prozesky). I still have most of my children’s books and they look a bit worse for wear from being lovingly read and reread over decades.

As an adult, I’ve kept my love for children’s stories. I still regularly reread Alice in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll) and The Wind in the Willows (Kenneth Grahame). And, of course, I love fantasy (JRR Tolkien, Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman) and young adult fiction. I think fantasy and young adult (YA) fiction are often underappreciated, especially YA fiction written by African writers. Two of my favourite YA fiction/fantasy authors are Tochi Onyebuchi and Lily Herne.

Onyebuchi is a Nigerian author who wrote Beasts Made of Night. It tells the story of Taj, who is an ‘aki’ – someone from the lower classes who is hired to devour the sins of the upper class so that they can live guilt-free. Beasts Made of Night is one of those books where I had to take a bit of time before being able to start reading the next book. Onyebuchi’s characterisation of Taj makes it impossible for readers not to connect with Taj on a deep emotional level. I’m eagerly awaiting the sequel, Crown of Thunder.

Lily Herne is the pen name of a mother/daughter writing duo. They wrote the Deadlands saga set in a post-apocalyptic, zombie-infested South Africa. I’ve finished the first three books and am desperately looking for the last book, Ash Remains. (If someone knows where I can buy or borrow a copy, please let me know!)

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
All these books, and many others, have left a lasting impression on me. The reasons are varied – some of them give readers glimpses into the lives of people or characters who usually would not get platforms in canonical works or public spaces; some of them are just enjoyably weird.

One book that made quite an impression on me is Musrum. It’s by far the weirdest book I’ve read. It is a British publication, written by Erick Thacker, a Methodist minister, and Anthony Earnshaw, an artist, art teacher and also an atheist. The book came about by them exchanging letters. The book also contains a lot drawings – some with religious themes, others containing symmetrical patterns and some even in the form of maps. The lettering and meaning of Musrum keep changing. (The picture on the opening page gives you an idea of how wonderfully strange the book is.) I’m still not sure if Musrum is a brilliant masterpiece or just delightful nonsense.

Opening page, Musrum. 

Who is (are) your favourite author(s)? Also tell us why?
Again, there are several! One of my favourite authors is Yvonne Vera. Her poetic prose voices unspeakable traumas: violent liberation wars and their aftermath in Nehanda and The Stone Virgins; the horrifying loss of a child in Without a Name; and brutal violence against women in Under the Tongue and Butterfly Burning. But her stories also foreground the resilience that people can have.

What are you reading at the moment?
I’m reading something light at the moment – Fiona Snyckers’ The Cat That Had a Clue. It’s the first book in a series called The Cat’s Paw Cozy Mysteries. The stories are Agatha Christie-like whodunnits with lots of cats in it.

Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
I enjoy both. There’s nothing better than the feel and smell of a physical book, but it’s so much more comfortable reading a Kindle book in bed.

Who is your favourite literary character?
There are many: Gandalf from Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, Alice from Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, Grace from Atwood’s Alias Grace, and Tiffany Aching from Pratchett’s Discworld novels. I think I like them so much because their identities are never really fixed; they’re constantly evolving and changing – sometimes heroically, sometimes in unsettling ways.

Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us (if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already)?
The best advice ever comes from Douglas Adams’ The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: “A towel … has great practical value”.

But jokes aside, a life-changing book is Sheldon B. Kopp’s If You Meet the Buddha on the Road, Kill Him! The Pilgrimage of Psychotherapy Patients. What resonated most with me is Kopp’s description of situational ethics:

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Rules will come to serve as tentative guidelines. Each act will have to be judged as a personal experience, in terms of its existential meaning, rather than by checking it out against a rule carved on a stone tablet long ago and far away.”

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What book/books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else?
My recommendation is to read any books you want, but to read widely. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie warns us against the “danger of the single story”. Reading widely saves us from the “incomplete” stories about other people and other places, it helps us recognise “our equal humanity” and “regain some kind of paradise”.

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Book chat with Rose R

Get to know us through the books we read! This month we chat to Rose Richards, head of the Writing Lab and the Language Centre’s Research portfolio. Rose says she like books that have something quirky or unique about them. Read on to hear what she says about books that have resonated with her recently.


What is the title of your favourite book, or a book that had a great impact on you?
This is a book that recently had an impact on me: The Five: The Untold Lives of Women Killed by Jack the Ripper by Hallie Rubenhold.

Why did this book make such an impression on you?
I am fascinated by real-life crime, especially in the patterns of deviant behaviour and victimology. I am also thrilled by new trends in investigation, and I like the way crime scene investigation often mirrors research methodology. I currently follow a number of podcasters, vloggers and documentary series on the topic. I find the current use of genetic genealogy to close cold cases peculiarly gratifying. There’s nothing like seeing the stunned mugshot of an aged criminal arrested for a crime he thought he’d got away with decades ago. (Check out Michelle McNamara’s I’ll be Gone in the Dark for an insight into the Golden State Killer’s case, cracked after four decades.)

Rubenhold’s book is a meticulously researched study of five of the victims of one of the most well-known serial killers in the world. The women were poor and semiliterate, living on the fringes of society, until Rubenhold’s book, known only for being victims. But Rubenhold has managed to find the paper trail of their lives, even with photographs sometimes, not of their brutalised remains, but of them at their weddings, with their children, with their parents. She brings them back to life as people, not just casualties. She does not dwell upon their deaths and scarcely mentions the monster who murdered them. In so doing she restores their dignity and shows them to be tough, resilient and resourceful despite their challenging circumstances. She also shows that their stories are not as straightforward as they are sometimes made out to be and that they are ultimately so much more than their circumstances or their endings.

Who is your favourite author? Also tell us why?
I don’t have only one favourite author – it’s so difficult to choose. I like books that have something quirky or unique about them. It can be something playful or profound. A favourite childhood author was Tove Jansson. I adored her Moomintroll series, which were made all the more enchanting by her illustrations of the world of Moomintroll and his family and friends. She transported me to a strange world of strange animals and plants that somehow felt like home. (I was surprised to find out years later that one of my best friends found them creepy and unsettling.) I always found them delightful. In the Moomintroll house, everyone is equal, even if you are very big or really tiny. The tiniest ones are usually the fiercest. No one is human, even if they look human and everyone hibernates in winter. Some of the household go on walkabouts, but they always return. Everyone has adventures and there is always summer to look forward to.

Tove Jansson’s Moomins. Photograph: © Moomin Characters ™

What are you reading at the moment?
I’m starting The Ghost Map: A Street, a City, an Epidemic and the Hidden Power of Urban Networks by Steven Johnson. It’s about the London cholera epidemic of 1854. The cholera epidemic was a landmark event, not only in its severity, but also in how people with various skill sets came together to find ways of stopping it.


Do you have a preference: reading physical books with paper pages or on a Kindle or other electronic platform? Why do you say so?
I read both. Kindle is really convenient because you can take many books with you wherever you go, but physical books are more tactile and more visually appealing, so I find it easier to remember their author and title details. I like to see my books on my shelves – it’s like seeing old friends. Each holds a set of memories or marks a point in my life.


What book have you re-read? Also tell us why?
Sherlock Holmes stories
Lord of the Rings
Moomintroll books
Jonathan Kellerman novels
They speak to me emotionally and sometimes I just like the way the authors tell the story.


Who is your favourite literary character?
I don’t have only one. Sherlock Holmes, Gandalf, Little My.


Have you perhaps learnt a life lesson from a book or character that you would like to share with us (if this hasn’t come up in one of your answers already)?


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Small people doing everyday things can help bring about great changes (Lord of the Rings).

Logic is important but undervalued (Sherlock Holmes).

Curiosity and passion can save you (Moomintroll).”

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What book/books would you recommend to your students, friends or anyone else?
I used to work in a book shop. Books need to suit the people you recommend them to. I know that my tastes are a bit idiosyncratic and often macabre so I hesitate to recommend books to people. However, I recently read Susannah Clarke’s Piranesi which was delightful, imaginative and a total surprise from beginning to end. She writes about magic infiltrating into our world and the effects of this.

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