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WELCOME TO THE WOMAN ZONE BOOK REVIEW PAGE.                   
​This is where members of the WZ Book Club get to share their thoughts on titles seen on the shelves of our Women’s Library. All reviews are unsolicited and only those attending the WZBC may borrow and review books.
The Woman Zone Book Club meets on the 2nd Saturday of every month between 2pm and 4pm at The Women’s Library, ground floor, Artscape.  All are welcome.
​
We welcome your reviews of women-authored books. Send between 200-500 words and cover pic if possible to info@womanzonect.co.za or hipzone@mweb and we will post it here! 

Two Months

3/27/2020

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TITLE: Two Months
AUTHOR: Gail Schimmel
PUBLISHER: Pan Macmillan
REVIEWER: Beryl Eichenberger
Having read Gail’s previous four books, all un-put-down-able and perfect book club reads, I was curious to see how she moved into genre of psychological thriller but of course she handles it with aplomb providing the tension and build up that turns every page. Gail has woven the sinister and evil with precision, opening the door onto the scourge of bullying and a story of a life rebuilt. 

From the moment you start reading it until the unpredictable end this is a story that grips and won’t let go.   What would you do if you woke one April morning and could not remember what had happened over the last two months? No-one not even your husband can fill you in. Or won’t is the bigger question – and what is he hiding? Primary school teacher Erica and her husband Kenneth have a good life: Erica is doing the job she loves, she is married to a man who loves her and the future looks bright – until that morning when she wakes up and finds that the last two months are a complete void.
Is this her brain reacting to an unpleasant experience – it’s happened before – something that Erica is unaware of – and what could have derailed her life now? After her horrific experiences at high school as the object of vicious bullying Erica has rebuilt her life.  Her only obvious flaw is that she is fat which, as we know can be the perfect launch-pad for toxic teenage girls.  Their reign of terror had encompassed Erica’s whole young life, her first boyfriend, her family, a car accident and an almost-tragedy. 
But that was then: today she is confident and while she doesn’t have a huge circle of friends - after her experience at school she is wary of getting too close to people –those she has are loyal.
How do you recover from the bullying? Repression is a good tool and Erica doesn’t think too much about that time. Instead she embraces her adult life and the good fortune she has encountered. She is a strong, kind and happy person who is ‘abundant’ rather than fat – adored by the loving Kenneth. 
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See What I Have Done

3/27/2020

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TITLE: See What I Have Done
AUTHOR: Sarah Schmidt
REVIEWER: Theresa Smith
BACK IN THE DAY the sensational trial of Lizzie Borden was the old time equivalent of the OJ Simpson trial. Despite being acquitted of the axe murder of her father and stepmother, Borden entered the world of fiction during that trial and never left. It doesn’t matter whether she did it or not, the fictional account of her actions took on a life of its own as she was recreated through rhyme and fiction to become a larger than life popular American myth.
​Sarah Schmidt’s approach is just as fictional, as she re-imagines the unsolved murder. Skipping between characters Schmidt takes us into the very thought processes of Lizzie, her sister Emma, their housemaid Bridget, uncle John and a mysterious stranger named Benjamin. That last character is totally made up, but all the rest were real.
The story Schmidt has created is just as made-up, but the meticulous way she lays out the story through the eyes of the various characters makes it feel very, very real.
It is equal parts disturbing and commonplace and gory. Written in a very pragmatically descriptive way with clinical descriptions of Sarah’s cleaning routine or Emma’s ruminations on missing out on her own life, it is nonetheless eerie too.
Despite the very icky descriptions of how the Bordens were killed, the book is an engrossing read. It is a beautifully crafted piece of fiction that questions through all the characters the concepts of female agency and familial interdependence. It’s not so much that Schmidt ignores the historical facts, as that she holds up the people and really looks at just how much power they had over their own lives. Did Lizzie kill her parents because of the stifling constraints of Victorian mores on a single woman living her parents’ home? Was she acquitted because the jury of men simply could not conceive of a woman murdering her own parents?
Schmidt paints a picture of people living in discomforting proximity, dependent on each other in a weird sort of way. This is the dark side to Victorian literature - there’s jealousy, anxiety, irritation and cloying co-dependancy.
This retelling goes much further than Jean Rhys’ Wide Sargasso Sea ever did with mad Bertha in the attic, in extrapolating a possible intention for Lizzie Borden. It also tells us a whole lot more about our contemporary relationship with feminist revisiting of old events than it does about the event itself. And, while Schmidt never comes down on way or another in pronouncing Lizzie’s guilt or innocence, the book is worth a read because it never reduces her to just those two sides of a coin but makes her as complex, and yes strange and not exactly nice, as a woman can be.
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Death on The Limpopo

3/27/2020

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TITLE: Death on The Limpopo
AUTHOR: Sally Andrew
PUBLISHER: :Umuzi
REVIEWER: Beryl Eichenberger
Ah Tannie Maria – you had me at the first page. Everyone’s favourite Karoo agony aunt and cook of note is back in another murder mystery set in the small Karoo town of Ladismith. It brings some wonderful new characters and a journey fraught with adventure and baggage from the past.Sally Andrew’s ‘Death on the Limpopo’ is the third in the series that has taken readers in five continents by storm. 
​Tannie Maria, her beau Henk and the team from the local newspaper embark on a rollicking journey that only requires a tin of buttermilk risks to chew through as you turn the pages (and the recipe is at the back ) so what more could you want?
Love, murder and some surprising revelations romp through this story. Andrew introduces us to the tall dark stranger Zabanguni Kani who arrives with a flourish on a Ducati motorbike. A journalist whose political exposés have put her in mortal danger she seeks refuge with Tannie Maria and then takes her on a journey to the country’s northern parts where a past that Maria has tried to forget is finally unravelled – with surprising consequences.
Andrew’s special brand of writing conjures up a wonderful picture of a Karoo road trip, the emotions that run with family connections and how food can be a saviour in all situations. This is a story that is deliciously addictive and you’ll be hooked from the start.   
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All That Is Left

3/27/2020

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TITLE: All That Is Left
AUTHOR: Kirsten Miller
PUBLISHER: Kwela
REVIEWER: Nancy Richards
​Political idealist and devotee of Biko, Thomas disappears. Eventually his wife despairs and holds a funeral even though there’s no body. But Thomas’s sister Rachel, forsaking her husband and young son, is uneasy and disturbed as she attends the memorial and reflects deeply on his and her own way of life. Thomas’s friends Max, her one time lover and Sizwe, a poet both make significant impact on her. A storyline through which is filtered the complex issues of South African identity.  

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Corporation Games

3/27/2020

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TITLE: Corporation Games
AUTHOR: Anneleigh Jacobsen
Publisher: Eyebrow
Reviewer: Beryl Eichenberger
​Greed (together with corruption) - possibly the most used word in the South African dictionary  and notated  as: intense and selfish desire for something, especially wealth, power, or food. Well, we all know about that – we see the stories daily in the papers, the so-called ‘cartels’ fleecing the consumer -  so this debut novel Corporation Games  from Anneleigh Jacobsen is right on target. 

​Using real life financial scandals as her inspiration plus her years as a brand manager in Sandton, Jacobsen has woven together a story that marries the sophisticated corporate world with traditional African superstitions in a very accessible and believable way.
Characters are finely penned and whilst not literary fiction this is a contemporary story that can be read with speed, delight and recognition.
Meet Georgie, marketing manager for a large corporation. Sophisticated and feisty she is respected by her peers and lusted by her boss.  Her integrity is unquestioned and her empathy reaches into the dark corners of her more traditional African associates. But something is off at her place of work and she can’t put her finger on it.
It is the shadows that are lengthening and moving, but only for Sindiwe and Kensington who are finding their presence more and more terrifying. These tokoloshes have something to say, they are gathering for the kill; a sinister warning in the plush offices of the firm. Something is very wrong at the corporation and, as the shadows move and re-group, Sindiwe is forced to go home to her rural village to seek answers.
Clinton, young, keen, and bright but still on the lower rungs, is asked – no told - to do something that is against his ethics and seeks advice from Georgie whom he trusts implicitly. And then there is the handsome, magnetic boss from England, Jake, whose personal life is something of a mess and about to get messier.
Jacobsen’s style is unpretentious and she describes the corporate world with honesty.  I particularly liked the short chapters. Jacobsen has learned the art of persuasion in writing - pushing you on to read the next chapter, and the next in search of answers.
A malevolent Board intent on its own agenda, dark forces and disruption, tokoloshes and tea, some sex in the city and rural Africa combine to provide a satisfying read with a clear question that is as disturbing as it is real. What about the rural consumer – how do they eke out a life when it is often governed by the collusion of greedy corporates whose bulging pockets are about to get bigger. Scrutiny that needs to be ever more vigilant, and reported to the Competition Commission who is credited with doing a good job. 
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Breaking Milk

3/27/2020

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TITLE: Breaking Milk
AUTHOR: Dawn Garisch
PUBLISHER: Karavan Press
REVIEWER: BERYL EICHENBERGER
​ ‘Breaking Milk’ is Dawn’s 7th novel and takes us into the world of protagonist Kate, a former geneticist and now an award winning organic cheese maker, over one seminal day. Her estrangement from her daughter Jess is at the heart of the novel as, on this day, Jess’s conjoined twins will be separated and Jess has forbidden Kate to come to London to be with her.  

​We enter the rooms of Kate’s mind as she wrestles with her inner anguish using her routine chores to cover her turmoil. Making cheese, running the farm and restaurant, dealing with her dementia addled father, a manipulative ex-husband and a besotted neighbour take us step by step through this day in vivid prose. Mothers united in their fear, Kate and Nosisi whose son Luzoko is undergoing initiation, work side by side in silent contemplation.
Highly emotive, the novel is an evocative and thoughtful exploration of confrontations, loss and ultimately acceptance. Incisively Garisch cuts through to the core of motherhood and relationships between humans, animals and the environment and uses all her very impressive skills as a writer, poet, playwright, mother, doctor and member of the medical humanities movement to set the scene. 
Garisch has the vision to show the connections and separations that are part of all our lives. It is a beautifully crafted book with a rhythm that is almost like a heartbeat. 
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