The Interpreters: South Africa’s New Nonfiction, Hedley Twidle and Sean Christie

R370.00

The Interpreters: South Africa’s New Nonfiction is a landmark anthology showcasing three decades of the country’s finest longform journalism and creative nonfiction. Edited by Sean Christie and Hedley Twidle, it features gripping true stories—from zama-zama miners to mermaids—that reflect South Africa’s complexity, creativity, and evolving narrative voice.

The Interpreters: South Africa’s New Nonfiction

Across three decades of democracy, South Africa has seen an outpouring of longform, narrative journalism and creative nonfiction – genres in which some of the country’s finest writers have tried to make sense of a complex and changing society. This brand new, one-of-a-kind anthology collects some of the best nonfiction published since the end of apartheid, carefully selected and introduced by editors Sean Christie and Hedley Twidle.

From the underworld of zama-zama goldminers to the tragicomic closure of a Cape Town Zoo, from stick fighting to punk rock, game lodges to fruit farms, cricket pitches to mermaids, The Interpreters: South Africa’s New Nonfiction assembles a range of true stories that are often more far-fetched, and more compelling, than any fiction.

Literary nonfiction in South Africa has often been found at the margins of our media – in zines, journals, now defunct magazines and personal blogs. It is a kind of writing that has, in general, not made much financial sense – more a medium for those obsessed with pursuing a single story over months or years. In The Interpreters, the editors have combed through 30 years of post-apartheid writing to produce a collection that combines preeminent names with lesser-known but no less immersive and powerful works of creative journalism – disparate views and voices that, when read together, have created a new topography of South Africa’s recent past.