Praise
For all that Schoemanโs novel summons up grand themes, its handling of them is subtle and sometimes mysterious, arriving at its most powerful moments unpredictably and honestly.
The meandering, exploratory narrative is at once beautiful and heartbreaking.
The giant of Afrikaans literature, in Else Silkeโs lucid translation, gives Sussie a whispering, almost incredulous voice as she sifts through the evidence from her life, pursuing answers to the mystery of her childhood... The Schoeman protagonists are slender, quiet, almost invisible. One of the authorโs most striking skills is his ability to turn these lethargic figures, so distant from their own inner lives and needs, into objects of empathy.
Schoemanโs prose comes most alive in descriptions of the South African countryside, tracing light and shadow over the veld. He is unsparing with his characters, giving them few paths for easy resolution.
Translated from Afrikaans, this postโApartheid novel carries the reader through four generations of Afrikaners and the value of memory. The tale of one woman and her deathbed reflections, it is a convergence of past and present permeated by gothic tones. This Life lyrically covers fear, violence, suffering, and other dark pockets of life while also stretching beyond itself into a modern melodrama about reconciliation.
[A] lyrical prose, full of gentle repetition and almost Beckettian self-doubt and self-contradiction... The translation by Else Silke is exemplary, in that it never feels as though it is operating once removed from Schoemanโs text. There is a poetics in the word choice, and an elegiac tone which helps to move the narrative forward even while it swirls around in the darkness. It makes This Life a joy to read and, I suspect, reread. Archipelago has, as always, produced a beautiful designed book, one which provides a perfect introduction to the work of one of South Africa's most celebrated writers.
One of the most moving tales imaginable... There is a strong meditative quality to the work, as well as a somber lyricism, reflected in the cadence and rhythm which is more often seen in poetry than prose.
Awaiting the light of a morning that will never come, Schoemanโs narrator speaks to us as if into a mirror, tracking dreams and memories like animals into unknown and forgotten spaces. This Life is a remarkable, ruminative novel told with the patience of the lithosphere.
An overwhelming, moving, lyrical book.
This Life is a novel of its time: a compulsion to understand the past in order to achieve reconciliation in the present.
In this late exemplar of the Afrikaans farm novel, Schoeman, the South African master of landscape, lays bare the bonds linking memory to place in story with steady but irresistible narrative force.
Schoemanโs novel uses the unforgiving setting of the South African veldt to frame the unfulfilling life of an Afrikaner woman on her death bed. Describing four generations of a single family, Schoeman explores the poverty of the Afrikaner experience, especially the alienated place of daughters in that society, showing that a broken society affects all of its citizens, not just its most persecuted.
And how, you might ask, could she possibly make such a book interesting? My answer: beats the hell out of me, but here is one that is - at least for one of us - un-put-down-ableโฆEven in the the sudden, short-lived spring in the high country, the language manages to turn lyric. We feel ourselves to be properly here.
Extras
If youย want to read aboutย Karel Schoeman’s other works,ย The Independentย andย Publishers Weeklyย both reviewedย Take Leave and Go.
South African History Onlineย talks about Karel Schoeman’s life.
Translator Else Silke reflects on her experience translating Schoeman.
This Lifeย made World Literature Today’s 75 Notable Books of 2015 List