The Local Lit Scene

celebrating South African Literature beyond our past

Around Africa on my Bicycle – Riaan Manser – a review

I am sure that if you follow me on FB or twitter, you know that I thoroughly enjoyed this book! Let me tell you a bit more about it…

I went book shopping a little while ago in one of my favourite second hand bookshops and I found it in the travel section, i often look in the travel because though I don’t do much of it myself, I do enjoy reading about others that have. Not all of them mind you, I like the quirky and interesting travel books, I remember one that I read a good many years ago called Around Ireland with a fridge, again I thoroughly enjoyed it. So, when I discovered this tome of a book, it was a given that it was coming home with me!

What I didn’t realise was that Riaan Manser was the very same man who went around Iceland on a Kayak, imagine my delight when I found out it was! I fell further in love with this intrepid traveller…

Firstly, I have to say, that I could never travel around Africa on a bicycle, the main reason being is that I cannot ride a bicycle, well, not very well and definitely not through terrain like Riaan had to traverse. So, why did I enjoy this book so much, that it even inspired me to go searching google and find him so that I could request an interview?

My first and foremost reason, is that he travelled Africa. Yes, I am born and bred South African but I have not travelled further than the Eastern Cape. I have not had the pleasure of meeting ‘real African wild life’ (bar from the animals that I see on the game farm on the way to and from my daughter’s school – including a zebra which seems to have come out of hiding and elephants at Addo), I haven’t experienced ‘African Food’ and the people of Africa are of such a wide array, I can honestly see why we are called the Rainbow Nation.

but he did, and on a bicycle no less!

36 500 kilometers and 34 countries,with experiences that most of us would cringe at.  I have the utmost respect and admiration for someone who can put away the creature comforts of our Western civilisation, go it alone and appreciate each and every one of his experiences. And experiences he had, many of them, which personally I think could shape ones internal life, spiritual and physical.

“Here I seemed to understand things about myself and the world itself that I had never understood or even thought of before. Like finding the places to put difficult puzzle pieces of a giant puzzle. nothing flashy happens but inside you know and understand that the puzzle is nearly completed. I don’t think it could have happened anywhere else on the planet.” – Riaan Manser.

Travelling from the V&A waterfront all along the coast line and coming back into Cape Town again, Riaan met many people on his journey, both good and bad and what I really enjoyed about this book is that he doesn’t hold back on spilling the beans on the ‘bad’ people. Both sides are mentioned but it is refreshing to see that usually kindness wins out on the most part. With a good few terrifying experiences, Riaan faces many of his fears in his determination to circumnavigate Africa.

It is a truly inspirational read and I urge to find yourself a copy and get stuck into its 700 pages, for South Africans and non South Africans alike, this will open your eyes to our country and its vast array of different people who inhabit it.

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The Hundred Foot Journey by Richard Morais

Oh my hat, what a delicious book this was!

I received it via the Book Blogger Secret Santa from bookshistoryandtravel.blogspot.de and she hit the nail on the head for her choice in books. I Loved it!

What is it about?

Hassan is born and raised in India in the kitchen, where his family has a restaurant. Surrounded by food and smells of India, Hassan has an inate ability to know how to cook food. When tragedy strikes the family leaves India and start a journey of eating around the world, finally settling in Lumiere in France.

And so begins Hassan’s journey from Indian cooking to French cooking, a hundred foot journey to be precise but yet so much longer than that.

This novel is about family, adventure, leaving the safety net of home and embracing change, and food. Much food. In fact, don’t be reading this book hungry because you will be ravenous within a couple of pages…

Have you read it? What did you think?

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The Grimm Legacy by Polly Schulman

I found this book in Exclusives and it appealed to my rather eclectic reading tastes. Yes, I am a fan of children’s fiction and especially where there is magic concerned;-)

I have to admit that it didn’t quite reach my expectations of what it would be like. It was enjoyable and very readable and defininitely more for children age 9 – 12 (possible a little younger even). It had adventure and magic and was easy to read, but for me there was something missing. I can’t quite put my finger on it.  Maybe it was just because it is aimed at a younger reader?

What is it about?  The Blurb on the back cover:

Elizabeth’s new after-school job is very unusual. The building where she works might not look very interesting but behind this ordinary Manhattan facade lurks a very special place indeed. Because here you can borrow anything that your heart desires… And in the basement is something so special, so secret, that Elizabeth can’t believe her eyes.

THE GRIMM COLLECTION.

Powerful and mysterious items that must be kept safe and can’t be lent out to just anyone. So when these object start disappearing Elizabeth must investigate. But who can she trust? One way or another she has to find out who is stealing from the Grimm Collection… and for what purposes.

I think this would appeal to younger readers as the writing is easy to understand and not too deep.

Have you read it? What did you think?

 

 

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The Beautiful Creatures Series by Kim Garcia and Margaret Stohl

 

I received Beautiful Redemption from Jean at Penguin Books Sa (Thanks Jean) but I couldn’t read it without reading the first three. I just can’t read the book at the end of the series, I need to read the whole bunch! So, I started with Beautiful Creatures and I enjoyed it. I found the beginning a little blah but it does get more interesting as you get into the story. What is it about?

Mortals, witches, dark castors, good and evil, superstitions and love, of course.

Ethan has been having dreams of a girl. When this girl arrives in his small town, it is love at first ‘not’ sight because this is the girl he has been dreaming of all these months. This is the story of their love. Of the differences between a mortal and a witch and the love between them. I have to admit to enjoying this series, I cant say that it had me on the edge of my seat in anticipation but it was definitely readable. I did find it a bit long winded and the love was a bit too teenagery intense for my personal liking  but it was what the main story was about. How Ethan and Lena manage to have a relationship that works.

In Beautiful Redemption, the last book in the series, *spoiler alert*

Ethan is dead and trying to find his way back to the Mortal world to be with Lena. This book I found a little too surreal and unbelievable, why should that be a problem for me I am not entirely sure as I read surreal and unbelievable books and enjoy them but I think it is because it was just slightly too saccharine for my tastes. I also think that the series would of worked better with three books instead of four. One other thing I didn’t really enjoy about the series was when Link was bitten by an incubus and changed into one himself, it was a bit too ‘oh well, we will just deal with that and not really worry about it all’ feel to it. Unlike in Cassandra Clare’s( Mortal Instrument) books where one of her characters get bitten by a vampire and changes, there was more realism to the concept. I mean if you were suddenly changed beyond belief would you just smile and go oh alrighty then??

Saying all of  that, it was an enjoyable read, not the best of the best but certainly something to while away the reading hours…

Have you read it, what did you think?

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Review: Pandemonium – Lauren Oliver

Pandemonium carries on where Delirium stops. Again, I thoroughly enjoyed this book! It was slightly different in the story set up in that it switches between ‘now’ and ‘then’.  *SPOILER ALERT * Then being the time Lena is in the Wilds and who she meets and how and what happens after escaping from ‘her old world’. Now being the story of what is happening in her life then. What I really enjoyed about this book is that it shows how someone can creep into your heart even though you may love someone else. How feelings grow between two people on completely different sides and different ideals, but yet sharing experiences may or may not mean love. I am truly looking forward to seeing how this pans out in the next book!

I thought it was written really well and I quite enjoyed reading the parallel stories. It brought to mind The 100 year old man.. book as it has a similar way of telling the story.

Lena is a great character in this book and I think the author kept her real, believable and extremely well written.

I don’t want to give away too much of the story line, but suffice to say that it ends on a high note and I am itching, yes itching to read the third installment – Requiem and I cannot wait!

What did you think?

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Review: Delirium – Lauren Oliver

After reading Divergent by Veronika Roth, I have been keeping my eyes open for more dystopian books and Delirium was one that I found recommended on the Blog of Erised, where I found the Dystopian reading challenge.

I could not find the book in ANY book store I went into, neither at my library, so I eventually ordered it to be brought in from a  neighbouring library. And I did not regret that at all. Really enjoyed this book! So much so, I went off to purchase the second in the series – Pandemonium (review to follow) and found out that the last and final instalment will be due out this month! Yippee! Love when I find a series close to when the last book comes out, make the reading so much nicer than having to wait year after year for the story to carry on…;-)

The Book Blurb:

There was a time when love was the most important thing in the world. People would go to the end of the earth to find it. They would tell lies for it. Even kill for it. Then, at last, they found a cure. Now, everything is different. Scientists are able to eradicate love, and the government demands that all citizens receive the cure upon turning 18. Lena Halloway has always looked forward to the day when she’ll be bored. A life without love is a life without pain: safe, measured, predictable, and happy. But then, with only 95 days left until her treatment, Lena does the unthinkable…

So, what I thought:

Similar in nature to The Hunger Games and Divergent but yet completely different. What I really enjoyed about this book is that Love was a disease and when one turned 18 one received a cure, which of course, turned one into a zombie but thats besides the point…

I really liked how the characters believed in their world, (until they didn’t) and at some wierd level I could understand why the ‘powers that be’  wanted the world to be the way it was. Clean, no war, no hatred but to the complete loss of love, care and passion. I read this book the day after a 17 year old girl was found brutally murdered and raped in South Africa,(all over the news and FB) which really got to me and so the idea of there being no violence or hatred somehow appealed to me But there is no such thing is there? If one cannot feel, then one cannot love and one cannot heal or forgive or do something to change, so on a deeper level this book did get to me, which is I suppose  a little strange…

I also like how the main character Lena, discovers how even though there is no violence in plain sight, there is indeed violence (but all without hatred as there is no feelings in the ones who are cured) and how it begins to rock the world that she lives in and that is what begins to change herself, her memories return with a clearer understanding and meeting an ‘uncured’ boy, an invalid who has lived in the wilds (the names of the people who live in the forbidden areas beyond the fence) and so begins another chapter of Lena’s life.

What I didn’t like: was how Lena was portrayed in the beginning of the story. It always seems to be the same, girl who doesn’t think she is pretty or strong, a nothing, invisible to the world and then as the story goes on, she gets braver and stronger and with the love interest, prettier. But, I am glad to say, that was the only thing I didn’t like and getting to the second book, that Lena has completely dissapeared, yay! I just think that it would be nice, if the main character knew that she was strong, or brave or pretty but without being smug about it, you know?

 

Anyway, it is a brilliant book I thoroughly enjoyed it! I think it may have to go onto my birthday book list for my neice.

Do read it and let me know what you think…

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Justin Bonello’s Ultimate Braai Master and Recipe Challenge!

 

I was very kindly given Justin Bonello’s ‘Ultimate Braai Master’ book to review by Penguin Books SA and what a scrumptious book to review.

Full of interesting and tasty recipes to make your braai just that Little bit more enticing to the tastebuds. I don’t know about you, but as much as I love braai’s, I really do get a teeny bit bored of the ‘same old same old’ coming out of the kitchen. this book does more than chase out the old, it brings in new ways of doing the same old same old. Tangy marinades, fresh salads, meaty meats and glamming up veg!

So, I have chosen one recipe to share with you. It’s easy, albeit a little messy, but tastes pretty darn good.

STUFFED ONIONS!

I Know, I also thought, ok, how do you stuff an onion?? Well, in this case, fairly easily but as I said,  fairly messily. Give it a try…

WHAT YOU NEED:

a couple of rashers of streaky bacon

about a cup of cream cheese

a bunch of spring onions – chopped

a handful of fresh coriander – chopped ( I didn’t have so I used parsley)

salt and pepper

a coule of chillies – seeded and chopped ( I used a sweet chill sauce drizzled over once I had stuffed the onions)

a couple of cloves of garlic – crushed and finely chopped

5 whole onions ( I used large onions but would recommend using smaller onions)

 

HOW TO MAKE THEM

Chop up the bacon and fry over hot coals until crispy (I used my oven for this part). Set aside to cool slightly on kitchen paper. Mix the cream cheese with the spring onions, coriander, salt , pepper, chilli and garlic. Add the bacon and stir it in.

Next, take the onions and slice a cross in each from sprout side to root side making sure you leave a couple of centimeters uncut at the root side (the onion needs to be kept whole). Carefully open the top of the wedges and stuff with the cream cheese mixture. ( I would recommend taking out a couple of the pieces of the onion from the middle in order to get just that little bit more stuffing in…) Place the onions, stalk side down (that’s the side  that hasn’t been cut through) on top of a sheet of foil and pull up the sides to form a parcel. Make sure there are no holes in you parcels. Put the onions next to (not on top of) medium to hot coals for about 40 – 45 minutes. Turn them often to ensure they cook evenly. When the parcel feels soft, you’re ready to serve.


And there you go, walah! Stuffed onions!

So,now I have a challenge for all you foodies out there. We still have a good couple of months of braai times and would love for you to give this recipe a go. See what you think, love or hate, will it be a regular or just a once off and then link back here so we can check out your attempts.

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The Emerald Atlas by John Stephens a review

This is my second book for children that I have read this year and am adding it in for my Kidlit Read and Review Challenge over at Lost in books.

THE EMERALD ATLAS – John Stephens

This is a first novel of a children’s fantasy series called ‘The Books of Beginning’ and aimed at 8 – 12 year olds. I guess I must have a 12 year old self in this thirty year old body somewhere as I loved this book! I have been going through a reading slump and just COULD NOT get into any book that I picked up and I have about 5 next to my bed, which are half read (MUST finish them at some point) and when I found this at the library – I often read children’s books when I have too much going on inside my head- and I picked it up on the Friday evening and was finished it by Sunday morning. It is readable, full of interesting characters, likable character and the world between worlds which I have always been fond of.

So, what is it about you may be wondering, let me tell you…

Kate, Emma and Michael have been passed from orphanage to orphanage for 10 years but still believe that their parents are alive and will find them someday. Finally they are shipped off to another orphanage up in the mountains and what feels like in the middle of nowhere with some rather strange characters to contend with.

They find a book, through a doorway which wasn’t there before and there starts the story of two worlds and how they may not feel remarkable in this one, but in the other, they are remarkable and have great destinies which they are not even aware off.

Throughout the story more and more information is revealed, with a host of characters which really bring the story alive. The descriptions of the worlds really draw you in and beg the reader to ‘read just one more page’.

What I like about this book is that it really is fantasy and in this first book there is no real ‘death. No body dies and I know that is a little unrealistic, but I really liked that aspect. There is a second book – The Fire Chronicle – which I plan to get my hands on as soon as I can and carry on reading about Kate, Emma and Michael. And I will let you know when I do!

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Help! There’s a stove in my kitchen…

Annabel Frere

I don’t know about you, but I get terribly bored in the kitchen, with figuring out what to make for supper, lunch, breakfast. I get very uninspired and then I don’t eat properly at all. This year I decided that we needed to focus on easy and quick recipes, nothing fancy snancy, but that taste good. Also, most nights The Man cooks because I work in the evenings and really, who, after a long day in front of the computer wants to think about preparing food? So, for Christmas,  I found this fabulous book for The Man to get some quick and easy inspiration and so far we are both loving it!

The idea for Help! There’s a stove in my kitchen was aimed at school leavers and young adults, but I promise you, this can be a mother’s (or father’s) new best friend in the kitchen. Need an idea for supper tonight?

Here is one of the recipes which is so simple, but tastes so good that I  feel quite silly for myself not thinking of it before…

Chorizo and Halloumi Couscous Salad

1 cup couscous

1tbs oil

4 – 6 fingers halloumi

1/2 cup chorizo sliced

1/4 cup diced red pepper

1/4 cup finely chopped onion

Dressing

1tbs lemon juice

1 tbs oil

salt and pepper to taste

*Cook couscous according to instructions on the packet

*Heat the oil in a medium frying pan over a moderate heat and fry the halloumi, chorizo, red pepper and onion, turning and stirring for 5 minutes until brown and crispy at the edges.

*Chop up the halloumi and mix all of the fried ingredients into the cooked couscous

*Mix the dressing in a cup and pour over the couscous salad.

Simple, see? And very tasty!

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LOVE SEX FLEAS GOD – BRUCE CLARK a review

Love Sex Fleas God by Bruce Clark

Confessions of a stay at home dad

I have been wanting to read this book since I saw it advertised the Your Child mag around the middle of last year. I finally got around to buying and reading it.

And what a wonderful read! Confessions of a stay at home dad, definitely have the same  thoughts and worries as a stay at home mom. Well, his thoughts resonated with me… But, it is not only related to bottles and babies and boobs, Bruce Clark is a humorous writer, ironic and yet quite ready to say what he believes. His childhood was erratic to say the least, and as most of you know, when you do not have the most idyllic childhood, you do your damndest to make sure that your child has a completely different upbringing and so does he.

This is a beautiful, sad, endearing, loving, horrifying at times, touching and inspirational book. I do believe that every parent and every child should read it!

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