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SSDA longlist announced! Plus: Bongani Madondo • Ngwatilo Mawiyoo • Charles Mungoshi • Rustum Kozain • Troy Onyango • Niq Mhlongo • Ekow Duker
The JRB, Vol. 3, Issue 2 (February 2019)
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Welcome to Vol. 3, Issue 3 of The Johannesburg Review of Books!
Thank you for subscribing to The JRB. We're delighted to present our new issue, online at
www.johannesburgreviewofbooks.com
. We sincerely hope you enjoy what's on offer, and
welcome your feedback here
.
'Baldwin the symbol of black transgression and global black anger is simply peerless'—Bongani Madondo on If Beale Street Could Talk, the book and Oscar-winning film
Illuminating a mighty poet and a total artist—Rustum Kozain reviews Dread Poetry and Freedom: Linton Kwesi Johnson and the Unfinished Revolution
Showcasing African literature's contribution to decolonisation—Lebohang Mojapelo reviews Ngugi: Reflections on His Life of Writing
[Sponsored]
Calling all South African poets, writing in any of South Africa's official languages: Enter the 2019 Sol Plaatje EU Poetry Award
[City Editor]
Niq Mhlongo's township etiquette—an irreverent guide to Soweto, my hood
[The JRB Exclusive]
2018 Short Story Day Africa Prize longlist announced
[Sponsored]
'One of the joys of writing is that you can build bridges between people' – Carol Campbell on her new book, The Tortoise Cried Its Only Tear
[New short fiction]
'Origami' by Troy Onyango
[Poetry]
Two new poems by Ngwatilo Mawiyoo
[Interview]
‘I use anything handy which kills the gods’—Read an interview with Charles Mungoshi (1947-2019)
[Photo Editor]
Two portraits of Charles Mungoshi (1947–2019) by Victor Dlamini
[The JRB exclusive]
Read an excerpt from Ekow Duker's forthcoming novel, Yellowbone
[Sponsored]
Rebels and Rage: Reflecting on #FeesMustFall – Adam Habib's characteristically frank take on the recent student protests
The novel as a series of moments of potentiality—Wemar Strydom on 'Translate Yourself', Eben Venter's first exhibition of visual work
'Postcolonial Africa is an interlocking of forms, signs and languages'—Photographs from Guy Tillim's new book Museum of the Revolution
[Sponsored]
'Expect a lot … you won't be disappointed'—The Accident, the new novel by Gail Schimmel, is out now [PLUS: Book Club competition]
[Francophone]
I'd Kill For Some Sleep: Tahar Ben Jelloun's novel L'insomnie tackles a modern malady
[The JRB Daily]
AfroYoungAdult talent search selection announced—stories from the world’s oldest continent with the youngest population
Copyright © 2019 The JRB, All rights reserved.
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