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Innards

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This incendiary debut of linked stories narrates the everyday lives of Soweto residents, from the early years of apartheid to its dissolution and beyond.

Set in Soweto, the urban heartbeat of South Africa, Innards tells the intimate stories of everyday black folks processing the savagery of apartheid with grit, wit, and their own distinctive bewildering humor. Rich with the thrilling textures of township language and life, it braids the voices and perspectives of an indelible cast of characters into a breathtaking collection flush with forgiveness, rage, ugliness, and beauty. Meet a fake PhD and ex-freedom fighter who remains unbothered by his own duplicity, a girl who goes mute after stumbling upon a burning body, twin siblings nursing a scorching feud, and a woman unraveling under the weight of a brutal encounter with the police. At the heart of these stories about deceit and ambition, appalling violence, familial turmoil, and love is South Africa's history of slavery, colonization, and apartheid. Like many Americans today, Innards' characters must navigate the shadows of the recent past alongside the uncertain opportunities of the promised land.

Full to bursting with life, in all its complexities and vagaries, Innards is an uncompromising depiction of black South Africa. Visceral and tender, it heralds the arrival of a major new voice in contemporary fiction.

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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 2022

      Born in apartheid-era South Africa and now living in New York, Rona Jaffe Award and Caine Prize honoree Makhene offers linked stories visiting the residents of the Black township of Soweto in Johannesburg. The fiercely conceived stories in this first collection feature a duplicitous former freedom fighter, a girl rendered mute by witnessing a burning body, and twins locked in relentless battle.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2023
      Linked stories of life in Soweto, South Africa, animate the region's fraught history of colonization and apartheid. Makhene shapes her debut story collection around suburban Soweto, from its inception during apartheid as the South-Western Townships until its eventual incorporation into Johannesburg proper. Makhene weds the region's evolving geography with a distinct sense of place, as in the title story, "Innards," which opens on Ntatemogolo's family farm, "a plump parcel on rich red earth" where generations have shepherded goats and sheep and buried umbilical cords in the ground according to tradition. The aging Ntatemogolo must sell offal to make ends meet, and Makhene renders these disparaged innards into treasure, each heart with "a bright gold fat blanketing the angry muscle." In other stories, ambitious narrative conceits don't always deliver. "7678B Old Potchefstroom Road," narrated by the home at that address, yields a conventional plot about a family reunion. But "7678B Chris Hani Road" reveals that Old Potchefstroom Road has been renamed for the leader of the South African Communist Party and artfully traces the connections between land and family back through history. Throughout the stories, Makhene peppers her prose with Dutch, Afrikaans, and South African English. Quick internet translations will reward diligent readers, but the book's most striking multilingual moments arrive when characters add their own flavor of interpretation. In "Star Colored Tears," a young man reflects on the word ninkumpupie, which sounds like "something you maybe drop from your mouth because it is hot inside from all the sweet potatoes you eat." Makhene's vividly rendered stories are propulsive and challenging.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      June 2, 2023

      DEBUT The title of this collection of linked stories perfectly reflects the interior trauma of living under centuries of oppression, distilling it into the daily lives of the residents of the Soweto township of Johannesburg, South Africa. Luminous language, generously inflected with vibrant dialects, extolls the celebration of Blackness yet vies with the unsettling subject matter, the unspeakable injustice visited upon generations of the majority Black population by the minority white colonizers. Stripped of their ancestral lands, families build homes on borrowed soil, coax food and flora from sterile ground, raise animals to sell their entrails, all while keeping wary eyes on the dusty road for signs of the authorities itching to arrest or displace. Some risk torture and death, clandestinely meeting, plotting an overthrow of the Afrikaner government. A young woman is rendered mute after witnessing a necklacing, a gruesome form of execution used to punish perceived collaborators. Rape is common, suicide the often-preferred escape. And yet, remarkably, still they rise. VERDICT Soweto-born Makhene uses her unique voice to characterize South Africa much as Ben Okri does for Nigeria or NoViolet Bulwayo for Zimbabwe. Her debut collection is necessarily difficult and disturbingly intense, as any stories of life under apartheid must be, but careful reading will unearth kernels of the inherent resilience and humor of her people.--Sally Bissell

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2023
      Makhene's literary debut is a much-needed addition to contemporary fiction. Through a series of interconnected stories featuring a diverse cast of colorful characters, Makhene narrates South Africa's past, present, and future. South Africa is so much more than apartheid. By presenting stories set before and after that era, Makehene allows readers to more fully experience the country and walk along the road of forgiveness and reconciliation. The stories focus on the people most impacted by that unjust regime, offering intimate, humanizing portraits and allowing Makhene to boldly juxtapose culture with grief and trauma. To reflect on moments of extreme evil and injustice in world history, it's crucial to read stories told by those who know the harsh realities firsthand. Makhene's stories capture the heart and soul of the Soweto people through her rich use of the vernacular and celebration of their lives. Readers will feel deeply connected to these characters. They will laugh with them, cry with them, rage with them, sympathize with them, and want to join the fight with them. Innards not only unapologetically reveals the experiences of many South Africans, it also reclaims the truth for those who have been most disenfranchised.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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