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Thursday 19 December 2019

Goon too soon - A short story


She was beautiful. She knew it, and everyone else knew it. She was born to a family of modest means, and demeanour. Her name was Tsotleho, and she was terminally ill. As she slept there on that old mattress,
which had seen better days, coughing and sputtering, while an anxious hand wiped her sweltering and perspiring forehead, she was being tortured by thoughts of a life poorly lived, and choices ill-made. Hardly twenty-five years old and she had reached the terminus of her life.
For as long as she could remember, people could not keep quiet about how beautiful she was. When she would be playing games of teams, everyone wanted to be on her team, even though she was not good in most of those games they used to play. At school she got by, but to her that was not important, because even if other kids beat her in school, they could never beat her in looks. Boys could not help looking at and admiring her. At first this used to annoy her, until she understood the power it gave, to be so irresistible to boys. It all started after her twelfth birthday…
She was growing breasts and she seemed to be filling up in the lower torso. She had never known she had curves, but it seemed that was what everyone was saying to her, and about her. She was not a yellow bone, by any stretch of the imagination, the expression older people used was ‘tlhaku ya tekwane’, which meant somewhere between yellow bone and dark-skinned. Tsotleho grew up in a small, close-knit community, where everyone knew everyone, and everyone was related to everyone, whether by blood or marriage or both. She had first, second and third cousins, and those that are anything from once to several times removed. She remembers many embarrassing visits to her better-off, “well-meaning” relatives, to ask for things like sugar, or tea or cooking oil or mealie meal, and sometimes even salt. She remembers going to their homes, to collect their pity gifts to her family, in the form of meat they no longer wanted to eat, and clothes their children had either outgrown or did not want anymore. The funny thing was that, most times the clothes would also be too small for her, as she was about the same age as this uncle’s daughter or the same size as that aunt’s daughters, who were eleven months apart.
She had a cousin, a few years younger than her, who was constantly teased about her shortcomings. Especially because she was quite dark, and everyone said she looked like a boy. And as though that was not bad enough, she had a name typically known to be given to boys. Sometimes Tsotleho also taunted her cousin, just so she could feel superior to her, because for some reason, her cousin’s intelligence irritated her, and the fact that she was ugly was no consolation. For a while she was brave to dish out the teasing, and see her cousin squirm, and cry, and cower away from this group of friends she had, as they all jeered and laughed, comparing her to everyone, and finding her the ugliest in the entire village; even neighbouring villages. The thing about this feeling of being better, or superior, is that it never lasted; it left her as soon as the lot of them dispersed to go to their respective homes.
The year of her doing the eighth grade, for the third time, was the year her little cousin caught up to her in school. This was the worst thing that could have happened to her. Her social life had improved though, by that time, because boys and men showed interest in her, and some men even gave her money, and bought her gifts. So she was now part of the in-group. This group was made up of mainly intellectual duds, and thus, had members varying in age, and she was the youngest member during that year. There was a new boy who had come to enrol at the school that year. It was rumoured that the boy was rich, and had been attending a white school where he used to live, and that he spoke immaculate English. The boy was handsome, but slightly younger than her, and he had a naughty glint in his eye. One time, this boy and his friends tried to corner her ugly cousin, and get her agreeing to be the girlfriend to one of them, the handsome boy’s closest friend. Tsotleho could not tell if this interest was genuine or not. But as it turned out, her cousin was being an idiot, because clearly those boys were doing her a favour, since she was just not going to catch any other boy’s eye.
Tsotleho started off not having much interest in the older men that were showing interest in her, and since these were mainly men that worked in the mines, they only came home to their families when they could take time away from work, and most chose to come during December holidays, while some would come during Easter, or in drips and drabs here and there. She was just enjoying the attention of older boys from school, and hoping to catch the interest of one newcomer boy. Sadly for her, she failed her eighth grade once again, and her little cousin progressed. After the ninth grade, all those who pass had to go to boarding school, because there were no high schools nearby. When her little cousin went off to boarding school, she was only then promoted to the ninth grade. She was now a senior in school, and she was proud to wear the invisible crown of being the senior of her school, and her school uniform reached new heights. By this time she was approaching her eighteenth year.
Being one of the older kids started to take its toll on her, and she was suddenly nagged by a desire to get away. The year she turned nineteen, she was promoted to the tenth grade, and that meant going off to boarding school. This soothed her restless spirit somewhat, and she wanted a boarding school so far away from home, that there would be no possibility of anyone she knew bumping into her. Sadly, because she knew that her options were sparse, where she went, would be dictated to by her family’s means. During the December holidays, preceding her debut in boarding school, she met an older man, who was working in a town more than four hundred kilometres from her home. Since the furthest option for boarding school was about ninety kilometres away from her village, she opted to go with this man. This man was not all that good looking, in her eyes, but he was her ticket to a better life.
When she got to the town by the sea, she felt shy. She would be all alone in the one room, where this man lived. After living with him for a few months, she began to realise that this man’s life there was actually no better than how they lived back home, and yet he worked. Another thing was that he was not so charming, and always complained about money, and food, and no matter what she cooked, it was never enough. She was not aware, but someone was watching all this unravel, waiting for a moment to insert themselves. Then there was one night the man came home with another woman, and three men. The men had paid the man to sleep with her, and she was just too naïve to even read it. This was only the beginning of her nightmare. Every night, there were men coming, but the same lady was a regular feature. She would later discover, that this lady was the one that was putting this man in touch, with all these men. This continued for months, and it escalated to a point where this man no longer went to work, instead he brought men to their twenty square metre cubicle. He no longer slept with the merchandise, and he drank most of the money away, so they were always strapped for cash, and he was getting desperate, and ended up wanting to bring men during all hours of the day and night. After three months of doing this Tsotleho fell ill, and customers were no longer happy, so they stopped coming. Those who had not come yet, heard about her condition and also stayed away. The man was livid, and tossed her out in the middle of the night.
She was fortunate, because it was around the time when the weather was getting warm, and this particular costal town was famous for its warm weather. The observer made his move, took her in, and gave her food and some care. He took her to the clinic the following morning, and it emerged that she had caught a sexually transmitted disease. She was lucky too, because it was only gonorrhoea, at least that is what the nurses said, when they were discussing her. She’d thought she was having a cold or maybe the flu. She was just too addled to think too much about the kindness of a strange man. Perhaps because he was easy on the eye, even though he was also much older than her, as far as she could tell. She waited for the other penny to drop, but this guy seemed not to have any physical interest in her. Months went by with her now dependent on this man. A year had gone by since she’d left home, and it was now the festive season, and people were visiting the town in great numbers. With this new guy she had more freedom, and because he used to take her for walks around the town, and would sometimes take her to the beach by taxi, she began to become more familiar with her surroundings. She was starting to feel positive about life, and thinking about her home, and the people she had left behind. She wanted to visit them one day, and she envisioned herself arriving with two bags of luggage, and lots of groceries. Everyone would admire her clothes, and how good she looked in them. Her cousin would realise that beauty was better than brains, because she would show up with a handsome man on her arm. These day dreams continued well into the New Year, and the more she had them was the more she fell in love with her rescuer. He, however, still neither showed nor hinted at wanting anything more from her. It got to a point where she was so grateful to this man, that she would have done almost anything he asked. She would not have long to wait. If only she had known how sordid this man’s mind was, and what dark and disturbing fantasies he nursed in his mind, while he waited for the opportune moment to spring them on her.
Thinking about it now, while lying on that matrass, she can still not believe some of the things that that man, had had her doing. And she did them all, and never once complained. She had heard about oral penetration, had even performed it for some of her “clients” before. But this man had wanted what he called, anal penetration, from her. At first she was just confused, but because she did not want to upset him, she pretended to know what he was talking about. She was scared of what he was going to do, and she imagined how painful it would be, but she felt more discomfort than pain when it happened. She also felt an overwhelming sense of shame, but she did not leave, only lived with the thoughts that came to her every night, of why this man was like this. That was only the beginning of the nightmare, but she was so deep in gratitude, that she kept making excuses for why things were the way they were. One day he brought another man to take part in their nightly sordid affair. He called this a threesome. Of course it was easier to just pretend all of these things were normal, because he was looking after her, he bought her nice clothes, did her hair every month, and gave her money to spend anyway she wanted. She just never thought to save the money, and perhaps one day use it to go home. Mainly because she was ashamed, and thought that she had a filth - which was commonly referred to as senyama in her part of the world -, and that if she went home, everyone would see it, and they would know what she had been doing. She knew her parents were angry with her for the way she left home, and the fact that she had not gone to school as had been the plan.
She woke up one morning, to find that she had soiled herself and the bedding. Knowing what a cleanliness freak the man was, she woke up immediately, and cleaned herself up as well as the linen. When he woke up he wanted to know why she had laundered bed linen so early, and why only her own. Not sure how to approach the question, she said that she had experienced unusual perspiration the night before, and had not wanted to let it affect the future odour of the linen, which she thought would happen if she delayed washing it out. She was too embarrassed to come clean about what had happened, because at the time she had not known that it was actually his fault. It happened again about two hours after she had woken. She got up from where she had been sitting, on the couch, and saw there was a stain. Remembering what she discovered that morning, she bent down for a whiff. and sure enough it smelled like fresh human waste. She ran to the bathroom, and inspected her clothing and underwear, and sure enough there was something there. By this time she could also smell the putrid odour. She panicked. After quickly wiping herself, and changing her clothes, she sneaked into the lounge area with a wet cloth to see about wiping what might be an already set-in stain, due to the time that had elapsed since she had gotten up. Fortunately the couches were made of leather, and even though they were a bright mustard colour, the stain could not be easily spotted as it had a similar shade. The second thing to be relieved about, was the fact that when she wiped, it came out without her needing to rub hard, and the fact that he did not catch her in the act of cleaning. She was now wondering why it was that she had not felt the stools come out, but having never had diarrhoea before, she thought that maybe it became like that when it was really severe. She decided that she would go to the clinic, but told the man that she was going for a walk. She was surprised that he did not ask her about where she intended walking to, like he normally did whenever she left the house. She was most certainly not prepared for what she was about to find out.
She got to the clinic and, while waiting to see the nurses, she had another incident. While trying to get to a bathroom, to get cleaned up, one of the nurses noticed and followed her. She then asked her about the stain that was clearly visible on the seat of her pants. Tsotleho then went on to tell the nurse what had happened. Indeed she had diarrhoea, but that was the least of her problems. What was the biggest concern, was that she had lost control of her bowel movement, and when the nurse took her to the examination room, and had her demonstrate squeezing the sphincter, while the nurse had inserted a finger into her anus, there was no pressure. As much as she willed her anal hole to refuse entry of the finger, or squeezed it to prevent further penetration, there was no success. The nurse’s suspicions were confirmed, and she shook her head in disgust. They were seeing more and more of such cases, and the pity was that when they asked the people who ended up like this, these people either started off by fabricating badly articulated lies that would not convince even an idiot, or they said they didn’t know. When they eventually came clean, it always emerged that they, women mostly, were naively being coerced into agreeing to this act, and it was rumoured that the first experience produced a kind of feeling that was somewhat intoxicating, and thus addictive. This nurse, for one, did not buy it, but she felt pity for the stupidity of some women. Now this young girl, was going to have to wear a diaper for the rest of her natural life, or until there was a medical breakthrough that enabled doctors to reverse or fix this kind of damage. Tsotleho could not stop crying, as the nurse explained to her what she thought was wrong with her, and how it would have come about. She could not even deny it when the nurse asked her about participating in such an act, on more than one occasion. The nurse also suggested that she get tested for the HI virus, and see a doctor about the treatment of the diarrhoea she had, if the pills the nurse gave her did not work. The nurse also encouraged her to see the doctor, in order to find out if there was anything they could do to help her, gave her some adult diapers, and sent her to the nurse who did HIV tests.
She felt numb. Even as the nurse explained to her the procedure for testing, and the counselling, her focus was not on anything that was being said to her. She was berating herself for having been so stupid. She knew about loss of motor skills because, back in her village lived an old lady who was suffering a similar kind of problem, but hers was the result of nothing foul she had done, or allowed to be done to her. While the nurse was asking her about her sexual activities, and she disclosed as openly as she could what she had been involved in, it seemed she needed yet another procedure to be done, which they called a pap smear. This one needed to be done by a specialist, and they were going to write her a referral letter. But she would need money or medical aid, to have it done. She pushed all this information to the back of her mind, and even when the nurse drew the blood, she did not feel anything. It seemed the numbness was physical as well, not just mental. She had just attained her twenty-first year of life, but now she was going to live like a baby forever. She did not imagine her rescuer would be okay with living with someone who had such problems, and she was sure that no one else would want her now. She was not sure where to go, once she was done at the clinic. She did not have enough money to go home with, and the only way for her to get money, was to wait for the time when her rescuer gives her money to go do her hair, or get some new clothes. By her own calculations, that would be in about a week or so, and that meant hiding her affliction from him. To ensure that there would be no request from him, for her to participate in his sordid act for the week, she planned to tell him about her diarrhoea, and that she was taking treatment for it, which should last a week or so. Her mind was made up, she was going home, and she would face whatever consequences that came with that decision. If her family shunned her, then she would have to come up with a new plan then.
She had to wait for the test results, and while she waited, she was supposed to speak with a counsellor, who told her how HIV was not a death sentence, and how many people lived long, healthy and normal lives with HIV, as long as they took their treatment. He also told her that when she got the results, she needed to wait for the window period to pass, and come back to do another test then, to be sure of the results, especially if the first result was negative. He asked her about her family, and seemed to want to establish whether she had a support structure or not. She was cagey on questions surrounding her family, and where her home was. The counsellor knew he could not compel her to answer questions she did not want to give answers to, so he released her to wait for the results. The wait seemed like the longest waiting she had ever done, and she was worried about what her rescuer would say when she got back. She hoped that her excuse of going to the clinic to get treatment for diarrhoea, will quiet any other questions he might have about her whereabouts, and why she took so long to get back. When the nurse finally called her back in, she had been about to walk out. After all, she had already gotten the treatment for the diarrhoea, and was not really interested in this HIV test thing. She knew also, that she was nervous about finding out, because as much as she did not understand the disease, she knew it would mean the end was near for her. She would not even know where or when she got it, if she got it from all those men she slept with for money, or from her rescuer and his friends. She was growing up really fast now, having to deal with all these hard decisions, and situations. She wished she had not been so greedy, or hasty, in living a better life. She thought about her little cousin, who was probably not so little anymore. It would seem that beauty had not worked for her, but instead had worked against her. Had she been smarter, perhaps things might have happened differently, but she knew she had been blinded by her need to end her poverty. She remembered once hearing her grandmother say that, people were jealous of beautiful things, and if they could not own them, they set out to destroy them. Sometimes they would mar them, just so they could be less beautiful, so they would feel less ugly around them. At the time, she had thought her grandmother was babbling, and could not possibly know what she was talking about, since she was not beautiful at all, in Tsotleho’s opinion. She was thinking how true those words sounded now.
The nurse delivered the news of her test results without much emotion. It was all very clinical, and factual, about what the disease was, what it meant for her to have a positive test outcome. How there was a six week window period, and how she needed to come back again after those six weeks, to confirm the status by having another test. Sometimes it happened that the first test was positive, and the subsequent one would be negative, in which case they would have to do deeper investigation, to confirm the negative result after a positive one, as that was not that common an occurrence, but nonetheless was the reality of the disease. The nurse sounded doubtful of a different result with the second test, and even as Tsotleho drowned out all this information, her mind was already playing a movie of how her life was now going to be. She was wondering if it was possible for someone who did not know, to tell when you had the virus. She was not sure if she could hide it from her rescuer, and even as she thought that, the nurse was saying that she needed to encourage any and all bed partners she had had, to come and get tested. If only this nurse knew what she was talking about! Tsotleho was certainly not going to be the one to tell all those people about it. They would have to discover it for themselves. She did not want to add beatings to her list of problems because, as sure as the sun rose in the east and set in the west, those people would blame her, and make sure she knew that is was her disease.
She arrived home to find him gone, so she had time to come up with all sorts of answers to the questions he might ask. She wondered again, if he would be able to see that she had it. She hoped that he would not want to do anything with her, when he came back from wherever he had gone, because he would discover the diaper she was wearing, and she would have to explain something she, herself, did not understand. There was a thought that kept coming to her, but she kept pushing it away. Each time it would come back, it would be stronger and harder to push away. She went to bed that night still waiting for him to come back, and woke up the following morning to find that he was still not there. That thought came to her again, and she just let herself think about it. It might be the best solution for her, since she depended on this man for money. Even as she came back to the idea of asking for money to do hair, she was thinking how that might not be such a good idea, because she was not even sure if the money he normally gave her would be enough for her to travel home with. And she could not risk coming back after she leaves, because she would have to come back with a freshly done hairdo, and he might want to get intimate, since she would have told him she was doing it for him. She decided to go to the salon and ask them what their most expensive service was, and they said putting on Brazilian hair extensions. But the price they quoted was so high that she would never have the nerve to ask for it. She asked them what hairstyle they could do, that would cost between four and five hundred, and they told her the style. She decided that that would be the one she tells him she wants to do. She then went to the taxi rank, asked about the cost of going to her home town, found that if she could have the five hundred, she would be able to get home, and have some money left over to get one or two things, as a peace offering to her parents when she got home. He did not come home for nearly two weeks, and the waiting - coupled with not knowing when he would show up -, were just enough to set her on edge. She spent her days eating and sleeping, and worrying about his return when she was awake. She had nightmares about how her reception would go, when she got home, and about what would happen when her rescuer came back from wherever he had gone. When she would wake up, and realise that it had all been a dream, she would supplicate God that he should come back having forgotten about the fact that, when he left, she had not been around. The diapers were running low as there was only twenty of them in the pack she was given. This was now an urgent source of worry, as even though the diarrhoea had stopped, the problem of messing herself had not completely gone away. After she had finished the treatment, her stools had taken some days to form, and they had not been soft, so she had gotten false hope, because she would have to put in some effort, so there was a warning before things went awry. But soon she was back to her regular soft stools, and the problem was clearly not going away, like she had begun to believe.
 He came back in a good mood but complained of exhaustion. Because she had stopped waiting for him with a surprise meal, like she had done the first five nights after she had discovered that he had not come home, she had not cooked anything to endear herself to him with. He arrived in the late afternoon, and she was able to see him before he got to the door, and raced to the entrance to meet him, and help him with the bag he was carrying. She guided him to the stained sofa, having forgotten about the stain. He allowed her to lead him there, settle him onto the sofa, take off his shoes, and rub his feet. He seemed to appreciate the attention she gave him, and she asked him what he would like to eat, but he said he was too tired and would prefer having something light, later in the evening. She decided to take the plunge and ask for the money. She told him how she had recently seen someone who had done a hairstyle that she had liked for a while now, and had wanted to do it but did not know how much it cost. She had then asked the lady who had done it how much it cost, and wondered if he would let her have it. She was smart, to make him believe that it would be he who would let her have the hairstyle, and not how it actually was. He said yes, took it out of his wallet, and handed over the money. She was so surprised by the ease with which it had happened, that she thought at first, that she must have imagined it. When she did not reach for it, he thought that she was just preoccupied with what she was doing, so he put it next to him on the sofa. She had to steel herself from reaching out and snatching it, even though she had fear that he might come out of his trance, realise what he had done, and take it back. He fell asleep soon after, and she used that moment to take the money, make him his light meal, and leave it for him to find. She went to pack what she could and keep it ready.
There was no time to lose. She left the following morning. Knowing that he had been tired, and would probably sleep in, she left a note saying she had decided to go early to the salon, so that if he woke up early he would not go looking for her. Unfortunately the taxis did not leave early, and so she had four hours to kill. Those four hours, until the eleventh hour of the morning, were spent in a frantic paranoia, with her always looking around, and having a fright when she saw someone - resembling him in stature or profile -, walking in the direction of the taxi rank. Twice, she found herself feigning to go find a toilet, just so that she would avoid being found by someone she had been convinced was him, while approaching the rank from a distance. People only started showing up to fill the taxi at the eleventh hour, evidence that they knew the travel times, and had she known them too, she would have timed her departure better. The taxi left at a quarter to eleven, after the last person arrived and took the remaining vacant seat. She was still tense, and only started to relax when the taxi had been en route for over half an hour, and she estimated that it had travelled a distance far enough that he would not discover her, or what she was up to.
Now that she was relieved about not being found out, the apprehension about how she would be received at home took residence in her mind. No matter how she tried to shake the feeling of foreboding or the disquieting fear, they just seemed to mount with every hour that passed. She arrived in her hometown to news of some of her friends, and classmates, having gotten married, and about two having died, and it being rumoured that they had died of AIDS. This was not what Tsotleho needed to hear, when she was already dealing with so much. Even as she spoke to the gossiper, whom she’d come across at the nearby town, where she was catching a taxi to the village, she was wondering if this very person could not tell that she was wearing a diaper, or that she had HIV. That she was going to spread it to everyone at home, and her parents would find out about her before she even got off the taxi. She decided to find out when this lady planned to catch the taxi back to the village, and fortunately she was planning on the last one. There were apparently three of them, with the first one leaving at twelve noon, and the one after it leaving at three in the afternoon. The last one left at six in the evening. She had missed the first taxi, which had left long before she arrived, but she was relieved to discover that she was in time to catch the second one. This meant she would be dealing with her family sooner than she might have liked, and she had hoped to arrive late, because when she had left, there had only been one taxi, and it used to collect the second load much later that six in the evening most times, due to issues the driver often encountered with the taxi, on the trip to drop off the first load, as well as the trip back for the second one. People who travelled from far, always arrived even as late as nine o’clock in the evening, and that would have suited her perfectly, since it would mean she arrives, goes straight to bed, and psyches herself up for the confrontation the following day. And that might be late in the afternoon, as her parents worked the fields during the day, and did chores for the other villagers in exchange for money or food items. It was her hope that the second taxi would have problems on the way, and hopefully arrive after sunset. She was not so lucky. The second one happened to be brand new, and was driven by a young guy who was speeding all the way while they were driving on the tarmac road. The trip home was much shorter than she remembered it. There was not much that had changed with the villages she passed, but where the changes were, they were noticeable. For one, the home that belonged to her cousin’s family, which was visible from where the taxi stops, looked different. There was a bricked house that was still in the process of being built, and from where she was, it was a big house. To make space for the house they had gotten rid of the biggest mud hut they used to have. People seemed to still be working on the house, even though it was after four in the afternoon, but she guessed that they most probably worked till sunset.  It was a lot quieter, and she could make out some young girls coming from the water well, carrying big buckets of water on their heads and walking in a circle, because they seemed more interested in what they were discussing that getting home in time to do whatever other chores that awaited them. She walked slowly towards home, crossing her fingers not to meet anyone that remembered her, because as much as she was afraid of nosey people, she was more afraid of what waited for her at home.
They seemed not to recognise her, and she could barely recognise her own mother. She looked so frail, and so dark! She was bonier than Tsotleho remembered her. Tsotleho was not aware that she, herself, had also undergone a big change since they last saw her, and just expected that they would know that it was her. She would find out later that her father’s eyesight had weakened, that he worked less and less, putting more pressure on her mother to go out for work. She found them sitting in the small hut; her mother was working on some wicker basket, while her father was removing corn from cobs. She greeted them hesitantly, and they still did not register any recognition as far as she could make out, from the way they responded. They seemed neither happy nor shocked to have this visitor in their home. She came into the hut, and sat down next to her mother. She whispered to her that she had come home to see them. The only reaction she could draw from that, was the sighting of a lone tear running down her mother’s face from her left eye. She tried to make herself useful, by offering to help them with what they were doing, but neither of them seemed ready to speak to her. Tears were running down her face too now, she did not know how to deal with this. She had expected shouting, maybe even lashing and having to plead her case, but they we just so closed up that she was not even sure what would happen, when it came time to sleep. Were they expecting her to leave and not spend the night? Had they suffered some kind of trauma that rendered them unable to remember her?
Even to this day her parents never asked or reprimanded her about what she did. They acted as though she had never left. She felt weighed down by her guilt, and was afraid to confront them about their placid welcome. She made herself useful, and was the one going out to get work, and bringing either money or crops or whatever else she got paid with. She delved so deep into that life, such that she never really had any time to think about her reasons for coming back. In the evenings she would be so tired, that, she would fall asleep soon after getting under the covers. The reminder, which never left her, was the situation of her bowels, which she earnestly tried to hide from her parents and everyone, by employing some tactics to ensure that she anticipated the movement prior to her body actually alerting her to it, which would often be too late as she would have soiled herself somewhat by then. This also meant that she was not dealing with her status of the virus, and not really understanding that there are precautions she must take to prevent infecting others. Especially when you are not taking any treatment. So she may have inadvertently infected some of the people who hired her, from time to time, where they would come into contact with her and might exchange bodily fluids through fresh and bleeding wounds. She would cook and prepare food for some people, and on many occasions she would cut herself accidentally, and without even thinking twice, use the dish cloth to wipe the blood and wash it after. Then she would not even cover the cut, if she felt it was not so deep that things she would be handling would go in and irritate or cause further infection. She may have infected some other people as well through her negligence. One such occasion might have been at a party that had been hosted by a well-endowed family, where she had been roped in to help with the preparations, and this included cooking. Some of her infected blood came into contact with an open wound, when this one lady she was chopping vegetables with, cut herself and Tsotleho helped stop the bleeding, while she still had a relatively new cut, which had begun to bleed quite earnestly, due to its being constantly in water as she washed things, and this blood made its way into the fresh wound of this other woman, as Tsotleho squeezed her finger to reduce the intensity of the bleeding from the cut; which was quite deep. They were both oblivious to this exchange of liquids and thus did not try to stop it. She may have also infected one of those boys she used to go to school with, who had propositioned her once upon a time, and she had turned him down because she felt he was below her standards. This boy, now a man who was going nowhere fast, had gone to initiation school and come back, but was struggling to meet women who were interested in being his wife, thought he saw an opportunity because, to him, Tsotleho was just like him. Remembering how she had turned him down, he just surveilled and bided his time, until he was sure that he would get her alone. He then proceeded to rape her repeatedly, that one evening he had succeeded in getting her alone. She remembered now the look on his face when she told him that she had the virus. At first, he had had a blank look, as though what she was saying to him had had no meaning. He proceeded to rape her, yet again, and suddenly he stopped, got off her and bolted, almost like a light bulb had suddenly gone on in his head. She had smiled a sad but victorious smile then, when she thought about what he might be doing to himself, to try and get the AIDS off. She had already heard stories of what people were doing to get themselves cured or uninfected. She had not paid these stories any mind, and had preferred not to actively listen when they were being discussed, because they would have her thinking about the virus and how she was going to die from it soon. She did not know where he ended up, if he was still alive or not.
She discovered that her little cousin had passed matric, and participated in something they called a learnership. This was a government initiative to help empower black people in the country, targeted at those from disadvantaged backgrounds, who still could not afford schooling even after the abolition of apartheid. Her cousin was living in a city far more glamorous, and bigger than the town she had been living in the past three and half years. She was doing an internship with an international company, and had done some improvements to the home her family owned in the village. She wanted to find out more about her little cousin, but she had not really been close with their family, now felt shy to go visit them. She also felt ashamed at the way she had thought and treated her cousin, and knew that she would not be able to convince people that she was now a different person, who wanted to hear more about the success of her cousin, as it gave her a sense of hope, and some level of bittersweet joy. She was very jealous of the things she had heard about her cousin, and felt that maybe she could live her dream of being well off, through this cousin, whom she had done nothing to inspire while they were growing up. She had been too caught up in looks, and the fact that her cousin was dark skinned and considered the ugliest girl in the family, and even the whole village perhaps. She was fortunate because she had not fallen pregnant despite all her reckless living.
Planting season approached, and preparations were underway to start planting the big and small fields owned by the families in the village. Her family also owned a big planting field of one and a quarter acres, which was located offsite. They also had small field adjoined to the family plot, which her mother used to plant vegetables and a small patch of maize, so they could enjoy roasting maize during harvest time like all other families, without having to go begging for some or doing chores to receive it as pay. Of course the planting of that maize was a tedious and manual chore through and through, because her family did not own any cattle, and it was costly to use other people’s oxen or hiring the tractor to plough the field. To plant your one acre field you needed at least four oxen and a yoke while for the smaller field at home two oxen would do, a hand operated plough, a hand operated planter, commercial manure with some cow dung that had been exposed to moisture from the rain and frosts or dew plus the heat from the cattle sleeping on it for months, the pressure from being trampled by hooves, the crop, strong men or women, as well as a boy or girl to lead the oxen. These were all things they did not have, so they planted using spades to till the soil, sowing the crop by hand, while those with means used planters which did the job faster. They then use a hoe to weed, and this was also one of those all-day-in-the-sun kinds of jobs, that were carried out over weeks, to help protect the crop and ensure its growth. The laborious hoeing was also done on the big fields, and to finish just one field took days with two women working on it for hours each day, and since there were a lot of fields, and not enough women to go around, only fields that were bigger than one acre were hoed by more than two people. She, of course, had to do the ploughing at home and in the big fields belonging to those well off families, who also rented her family’s big planting field for a measly pay in harvested crop.
Her cousin came to visit for the festive holidays, and stayed for two weeks. During that time, Tsotleho got to visit with her and ask about the things she had heard, and also got more information about what life was like in the big city. She wished she could ask her cousin to take her with. But from the sound of it, she had just got permanently hired some two months prior, and life was costly that side. To save on rental, she was sharing a two bedroom flat with someone, and that was a challenge in itself, without adding someone who would be nothing but a parasite. Not that her cousin used those exact words, to explain the situation. It was in just the way she had complained about a time when this roommate had been visited by their sister, who had stayed for an entire month, and the utility bill was so high and this girl still expected her cousin to share in the bill equally, and when her cousin suggested that the roommate should pay two thirds, because she had her sister there. They got into a fight, and life was uncomfortable for months after that. This was while she still earned an allowance, as she was then still an intern. Her cousin’s job required her to have her own transport, and so she had to stay in her current living arrangements, since she would have car repayments added to her list of expenses soon, but she first needed to get licensed to drive a car. Tsotleho listened to all this in awe, and envy. Once again realising how beauty had not worked for her as well as brains had worked for her cousin. Her cousin’s kindness towards her, and the fact that she seemed not to hold the past against her, was like thorns piercing her all over. It would have been better, if her cousin had been self-aggrandising or self-righteous or accusatory, because then she would not seem even more undeserving of the cruelty she had levelled at her, all those years ago. As much as she realised that her cousin was a lot more educated than anyone she knew, she still feared disclosing the fact that she had the virus, to her. So she asked, in what she thought was a casual and detached tone, about her cousin’s love life. Her cousin mentioned that men showed great interest in her, but she was focussing on growing her career. That with the whole AIDS epidemic thing, she was also not going to be naïve about things, and accept the attention from men. Largely because, she found this attention they gave her, suspicious. Her cousin did not believe the compliments men gave her, or when they said she was beautiful. She felt that they were lying through their smiling teeth. Tsotleho no longer thought her cousin was ugly or naive, she actually saw the beauty she realised had always been there, but they had just been too focussed on her darkness of tone, that they never even gave her credit for the beautiful assembly of her facial features. She looked like some of those models Tsotleho had seen on magazines, and her lean figure was now something to be envied. From the pictures on her cellphone, one where it showed her dressed for work and one where she had gone to an evening function, showed such a glamorous and beautiful woman, who was suited by anything she wore, because even the one where she wore some casual torn jeans, she looked like she had been posing for a photo shoot. She realised how much damage they had all caused in her, because her cousin accepted none of the compliments Tsotleho gave her, instead she brushed them off as kindness and not the truth. Tears were suddenly in Tsotleho’s eyes, and regret was eating away at her. She wanted to get away, but could not pull herself away, so she pretended that something had gotten into her eye. The lump in her throat was much harder to overcome. There was something that irritated her during all those evenings she spent with her cousin, and that was what her cousin had called social media. It showed that her cousin was popular, because her friends from the city would be texting her throughout, and she would be texting back and laughing at some things which she did not share with Tsotleho. Her excuse would be that Tsotleho would not get it, unless she had been there at the time those things which her friends talked about happened, or it would be something about work. Tsotleho felt that sometimes her cousin was being haughty.
With her cousin gone, it was back to the monotonous life of work and sleep. She was losing weight and she was not aware of it, even though she found it odd that some of her clothes felt loose, but had not really given herself time to reflect on why that was. School started, so once again there was more work, but not enough time in a day to do it in. She received a gift from her cousin in the post, and it was a cellphone. There was a letter enclosed, and in there her cousin was telling her that she had set it up for her, and demonstrated to her what pattern to use to use to open the keypad. It was called a touchscreen phone, and she had setup an email account for her and created a facebook account as well. She said that, this way they would be able to keep in touch, in much the same way as she had been able to keep in touch with her friends, while she was with them during Christmas and New Year. This got her excited, but she was also overwhelmed, as her cousin spoke about a lot of things she could not understand. Her cousin promised to come for a visit during the Easter holidays, for a week, and she would show her how to work with applications on the phone. Easter time is harvest time and Tsotleho knew that her cousin’s motivation was the image of roasted maize, and that year Easter was coming early in March. Tsotleho decided to wait for her cousin before she used the phone. She wrote back to express her gratitude, for such a gesture, from someone who was not obliged to do anything for her. It was like daggers to her heart, but she could not bring herself to refuse it, so she accepted it with as much grace as she could muster. There was a post script that puzzled her, which said that she looked good, like she was a sportsperson. Between carrying water on her head; pushing twenty litre plastic bottles of water on a wheelbarrow; collecting firewood; washing people’s clothes and heavy blankets; grinding maize; cooking with heavy, black, three-foot pots; washing these pots; walking distances to do heavy grocery shopping for things that were not even for her to enjoy; all this for a measly sum or a bag of mealies or whatever demeaning form of payment these people thought up. Then there was all that work done during the planting season that involved all that spade tilling, hand sowing and hoeing weeds the whole day in those big fields for days! It was all hard labour. Now harvesting season had arrived, and she remembered from her childhood days the work that was involved during that time of the year. Having been at school for the better part of that time, she had not fully appreciated just how much work until now. Soon the crop would be ready to be gathered, and put into burlap sacks, and loaded onto sleighs pulled by yoked oxen or, for the more wealthy villagers, a tractor would be used.
Her cousin came as promised, and once again her evenings were something to look forward to. She showed Tsotleho how to use the phone, and all that social media stuff, like the different chatting applications. Her cousin knew so much, and Tshotleho felt great shame that someone younger than her knew more than she did. They talked about her work and upcoming assignment overseas, in some country Tsotleho remembered studying about in school, England, while roasting maize on hot coals made from firewood she’d gathered. She wished she did not feel so hopeless about her life, or her absent future. Once again she toyed with the idea of telling her cousin about her status. She would not tell her how she got it. She had not spoken to anyone about the rape incident, and since her cousin would be going so far away from home, she would take the secret with her. And two years was long enough for her to come back having forgotten all about it. This work assignment was the reason she had come to visit her family so soon after her last visit, because she knew she would not see them for two years after that. What Tsotleho did not know was that her cousin would get two trips per year to come home. So she planned to tell her cousin her woes, on her last evening home. She did not know how to broach the subject, so she just blurted out that someone had raped her, and that she guessed that she had HIV. And like that, she had laid the blame for her having the virus on this rapist. Her cousin was speechless, and they just sat there in the silence that was broken by the crackling of the fire. They inadvertently burned the maize they were roasting, because each got lost in deep thought that took them great distances from where they were physically. Tsotleho’s thoughts took on a morbid direction, while her cousin’s took on an insidious one. Her cousin never believing she could hate men more, found herself hating them with a new and even more potent hatred, and she could not even mask it from Tsotleho. She did not know what to make of the reaction her young cousin seemed to exhibit, and she was not sure whether to stay or leave. She got up to go, and it seemed that her cousin got up at the same time and hugged her. She had only seen people hug on television, when she used to watch it at her rescuer’s house. She had not thought of him since the day she left, and if felt strange to think about him then. The hug was long and tight, when it was over she felt better, with a feeling that she wished it had not ended. She had never known that someone younger could make someone older feel so safe, and she had felt safe and hopeful. What her cousin said just before she left, was surprising to her, and she was not sure if it was a good idea for her to write about what happened, as suggested. She told Tsotleho that she would send her a diary that had a lock, so she could then write in that diary, and lock it so that no one would read it, and that made Tsotleho feel better about it.
She felt a slight depression overcome her after this departure, because she knew that she might never see her little cousin again. It was back to her unexciting life, and the work that never got better, either through remuneration or in the way she could do it. Some man had come back from the mine, and she had been called to come through every afternoon to cook him lunch and dish it, and to clean the room where he was being nursed back to health. This man was thin, and he coughed a lot. It would later emerge that he had contracted an illness of the lungs, due to exposure at the mine where he had been working for more than fifteen years. He, unfortunately did not survive more than a few months, after returning home. His family were left destitute, not that they were that much better off while he was still alive and working, but they had certainly been better that her family. It was just such a pity that this man had worked so hard, for so long, and had not even one bovine to show for it. He never modernized his home, but instead chose to shack up with some woman there, where he had been working. Now that woman had brought two kids to his funeral, and had dumped them with this man’s family in the village, and the poor wife, whom he had given four children to, was now struck having to feed six children. This was, sadly, not an uncommon occurrence, as these men who worked away from home always lived double lives, and it would seem they were not really making good choices. Because these women never wanted to come with them to the village, when they retired from working in the mines, or if they got sick and had to stop working, like this man did. They would send off the children they had had with these men, to their rural wives.
Her twenty third birthday brought with it, the start of her battle with her health. She had gone to town, to once again do grocery shopping for other people. She got rained on from the time she walked to the taxi stop that morning, to when she was walking to the different shops to get the different items for these elderly villagers. The groceries got heavier and heavier; as fast as she had been doing the shopping, she got delayed where queues were long, or there were issues with tills jamming. And this one time, she was behind the slowest person on the planet to ever get through the pay point. She ended up missing the second taxi home, and had to wait in the rain for the last one. As she sat there, soaking and still getting rained on, she was feeling cold to the bone. Her nose started running and she began to sneeze. She was blowing her nose with the very long-sleeved t-shirt she was wearing, because she could not risk taking tissues out of plastic bags, and exposing them to the wetness. It was a miserable rainy winter day, and she felt as miserable as the day itself. She had no hope of ever having a better life than what she was living, and it was getting harder with each year that passed. It was during these low moments in her life that the dark thought would impose itself into her thoughts, and had become even more appealing during recent times. She cried, sitting there waiting for a taxi that would come hours after she had gotten to the rank. She had tried to seek shelter on the side of a van that had been parked there when she arrived. But an hour later the owner came and drove it away, and she was forced to carry those heavy grocery bags and look for another place to crawl and curl up in, while she waited. No one took pity on her, and this just made her even sadder. She started crying again, and the tears just kept rolling, unseen by onlookers because of the rain. The only tell-tale signs that she was crying were the sniffles, which people just mistook for her struggling with a runny nose. She cried for hours, tears intermingling with mucus, and all these ended up on that sleeve of her slim fitting t-shirt. What a day to celebrate a birthday, she was now convinced that God hated her.
 She contracted pneumonia, which was not diagnosed early, because when she started coughing and having chest pains, she thought she was having a severe cold. The eve of that day she got soaked, had found her still waiting for the taxi, which only arrived to collect them just before seven o’clock. By the time she got home, she was shivering so hard that she had to clench her teeth the entire time while she boiled water and took a hot bath, in an effort to thaw herself and restore some body heat. She made hot tea, which she had with some bread she had brought from town. After she had eaten, she went straight to bed, and decided she would wash the dishes the following morning. She awoke in the middle of the night feeling feverish, and her bedding was moist from sweating. She thought that maybe it was because of the hot bath, so she took off what she was wearing, and wrapped herself in a big towel, which was worn and threaded, and went back to sleep on the same bedding, because she did not feel that it needed changing, not that she had anything to change it with. She struggled to fall asleep, as she was feeling hot, so she ended up reducing the layers of blankets she had been sleeping with. First from three to two, and then from two to one. She woke up the following morning with a sore body, and she felt lethargic. She dragged herself around to get ready, but she just did not feel like going out to work. The atmosphere felt damp from the previous day’s wet weather, and she needed to deliver the groceries she had gotten. She forced herself to at least do that, and collect her wages. She came straight home as soon as she was done. Her body seemed to ache all over, and everything - including breathing - felt like such a chore. Later that day she started coughing, and thankfully she was home so she decided to take a nap, and see how she would feel when she woke up. She decided to ready the bed so that she won’t have to do it again when she went to sleep that evening, just to avoid the torture of doing anything laborious. She took one of her mother’s treasured blankets, and placed in on the inside, then turned the blankets around so that the one that was on top the night before, was now on the inside. The coughs were infrequent at that time, having only just started. She ended up sleeping the entire night, but sometime in the wee hours she started coughing for long periods, and these coughs were wrenching her body. Her mother heard her, woke up to check on her, and found that she was coughing while she slept. The following morning, her mother decided to take her to the clinic. She woke up at dawn and prepared a bath for her, then woke her up, and made her breakfast while she bathed. While she was moisturising and dressing, her mother took her own bath, and by the time she'd finished eating, her mother was starting with her own breakfast. They left for the clinic soon after. This was the first motherly thing her mother had done since she came back, and she cried tears of joy and sadness all at the same time.
The clinic was far and they walked briskly to get there early. She found it hard to keep up with her mother, something which had been the reverse since she was six years old. At six she could not only keep up but walk faster than her mother. Today she felt weak, waiflike even. Her mother had to hold her by the hand, just to keep her from falling too far behind, and had to pull her most of the way. Her mother had not held her hand while they walked since she was five years old, when she had embarked on a mission to improve her walking speed to surpass that of her mother's, a task which took a little over a year to accomplish. She remembered the last time she had gone to the clinic, and the reason she had had to go there. When they finally got to the clinic, and were waiting for it to open, she felt as if her knees were aflame, and she sagged down onto a bench meant for elderly people, to sit on while they waited. The nurses thought that she had flu, which they based on the little information she provided, and gave her some cocktail, which she was supposed to take over a period of two weeks to get better. Had she been more descriptive and comprehensive, they might have reached a different conclusion, but they were also a lazy bunch, which never liked to overexert themselves. The walk home was a lot more relaxed, but she did not suffer any less from it. Her mother took care of her the entire two weeks she was supposed to take the treatment, and she showed signs of improvement only in the second week of that regime. By the time the regime was completed she was feeling more positive that she was on her way to full recovery. Two days after the fact she was feeling weak again, and this time she was having intense headaches, and a feeling like something was constricting her chest. When she went back to the clinic, they forwarded her to the hospital immediately. She remembers now the words from the doctor at the hospital, some four months after she had been admitted there, when he was trying to convince her parents to take her home, while she still lived. Ironically the rest of her life was now counted in months. The hospital had meagre facilities, being a government hospital, and they had initially not thought to test her for the virus when she got admitted, because the diagnosis had been pneumonia, and it was only when she did not show any signs of improvement, despite being on a the strongest regimen they had, that they thought to look for other things that might be making her sick. The doctor had said that the pneumonia was severe, due to her lowered immune system as a result of the virus having progressed to full blown AIDS, during the time she was being treated. Since she now had full blown AIDS, all they could do was manage her pain until the time that she passed on. He also added that he could see that the family was struggling, so it would be best if they did not have to incur the expense of coming to the hospital to see her until that time came, so he was suggesting that they take her home and he would give them medication to help her cope. Being people of no education, they just accepted what the doctor said without question. He gave them two large sacks of a powder which he instructed that they were to feed to her twice a day, to improve her strength. Messing on herself was now being blamed on the gravity of her known illness, and the fact that her AIDS was only making things worse. She did not have to explain the loose bowel problem to anyone.
 And now she is in the throes of excruciating pain which leaves her wanting nothing more than to just die, and be free of the suffering. She has been a very difficult patient, refusing any and all efforts from her mother to feed her. She has an unquenchable thirst and liquids are all that she accepts eating. She feels that it is not right to eat, only to soil herself afterwards, for her mother to clean her. Urinating is the only waste removal she still has control of, and eating also makes her vomit. Her father would often hover, when he thought she was asleep, and stare at her for long periods, and if she moved, he would scurry away like a mouse. Lying here, waiting for death to come, she is overwhelmed by sadness at the thought of never seeing her little cousin again. Wherever she is, she knows nothing about this, and will probably only find out some years after. If only she knew that her death came shortly before her cousin was due to arrive for her first visit, she might have crossed over with a serene expression. Instead, it is with a tear-stained and contorted face that her last breath is expended.
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Her Heart R210.00
His Joy R160.00
Their Hope R185.00
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The Comedian with a Lisp R180.00
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Monday 2 December 2019

South African Indie Authors whose books you should totally check out


Hi there reader.

As the elected chairperson of the Independent Authors South Africa, otherwise known as #IASA, executive; it is my wish and pleasure to promote the works of its members.

I am here to tell you about South African Indie Authors whose books you should totally check out.

Please note that these recommendations are not all based on books I have read from the authors as I don't read all genres. Some are based on the feedback which I will quote, as shared on a reading platform.

This is by no means an exhaustive list, but is made up of people who have interacted with me in this space, and who have thus piqued my interest in their work. 

In no particular order, they are:

  1. Mamotladi Ivy Matloga
I have read Mamotladi’s work and I find her first book #MadnessInDuggard witty, informative and spellbinding. The story of Dooks is one we should all read if we wish to not only understand mental illness in some of its facets, but also to realise that people with mental illness can also live ordinary lives, have ordinary and extraordinary dreams like those of us who consider ourselves sane.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
2.   Pertunia Lehoka
I have read a sample of Pertunia’s book # ProvidenceMysteryoftheSoulTies; which is based on the life and choices of young Jewls, take us on a journey from her birth to adulthood. Showing us the friends she makes and keeps along the way, and the brotherhood between her own brother and a neighbour who is also his best friend. The boys vow to become her protectors from the day they lay eyes on her, having helped entry into this life.

I look forward reading the Sesotho version of this story.

This writer is passionate about mother tongue preservation and the benefits of reading in one’s home language. She is also a life coach, which makes her a keen observer of life and the things that make it work.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
3.   Ayanda Xaba
Ayanda is an old writer but a young author. She has been writing for over 19 years and published her first book in 2016. # UlalaTheJourneyofDiscovery is the story of a young police officer named Siya, who leaves his city life for some weeks, to spend time in the village of Mgabaye, in an effort to solve a series of murders in that village. If you like a dose of reality with a touch of the supernatural, are also a keen observer of how live is lived by villagers, then you will enjoy delving into this easy read.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
4.   Busisekile Khumalo
Busisekile writes about romance and all the wonderful things that reading about love stories can evoke in a reader. If you are not intimidated by strong language, in the sense that her writing is peppered in choice words, as well as steamy sex scenes, then you will enjoy indulging in her work. Her books are #TheHarvardWife and #Nomaswazi
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
5.   Takalani M
Takalani’s #RoyalMistress series is the story that follows a young man with a big responsibility. Her writing may spot some expletives here and there, but is it largely sanitary. It has a smattering of steamy scenes between this royal son and his battle with his destiny and what he wants.
The Royal Mistress

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
6.   Anelile Gibixego
Anelile writes about aspirations. She follows the life of young and ambitious Nqobile in #iGoliDreams, as she navigates life in the land of opportunities, where she discovers that innocent dreams can turn into nightmares when they meet real life and its challenges. Language and sex are there in the book, to take you into her confidence and show you how liberal and free she is about herself.
iGoli Dreams

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
7.   Ike Obidike
Ike writes a fast-paced story involving a love story across African borders in #ShiftingSands.
Nomathemba on goodreads says “hifting Sands is a pleasure to read. It is well-written. The pace is good even with all the drama. Ike brings his characters to life, particularly Mama Adaku, the matriarch who is so imposing. The story takes one from the bustle of the urban jungle that is Johannesburg, to the relative peace of the village in Nigeria. One gets an appreciation of how similar the cultures are despite differences in language
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You can see his books, as well as get in touch with him on the below links
8.   Thabang Lebest
Thabang says this about his first published book “The book ‘Khensani & One Star-Born White Boy’ took me more than three years to complete. This is my best work to date and I am so glad that it is finally here. Most of my readers who began the journey with me back in 2012 can attest to the fact that I took a long break from the social media as I was working on this project. Remember your first publication must be perfect, yes PERFECT. The storyline must be catchy and realism must be portrayed.”

You can see his books, as well as get in touch with him on the below links
9.   Lindsay Mnguni
Lindsay wrote a story about his life as a firefighter. His book is titled #FirefighterFirstandForemost. In an interview he said that he wanted to share a story about what it is like to be a firefighter in South Africa, and the plight of those who work in this industry that is under-resourced, but yet so very crucial as a service to the country’s public.
Firefighter: First and Foremost

You can see his books, as well as get in touch with him on the below links
10.                     Mushadu MD Dovhani
Dovhani’s book #AkhonaAVictimOfLove. I have not read this book and I struggle to find anything about what the readers of the book had to say about it.

“The book is out of this world, don’t regret having it. Its worth it, you’re so talented, can’t wait to have your other books.my brother, this is a God given talent. I’m glad I read it.” Makoma Seerene

“From SA authors I’ve only read this book and I must say it was nice and an eye opener.” Mudau phathutshedzo

“Nice story line hey. It’s really a good job, well thought and well executed.” Rendani Nevondo

“I enjoyed reading the book” Tenda Gumula

“You’ll go far with your work. You should really sell this story, I literally cried while reading, felt like a real movie. This book has life lessons. Rotondwa Mbulaheni
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You can see his books, as well as get in touch with him on the below links

11.                     Dudu Busani-Dube
Dudu’s #TheHlomuSeries is the story of a family of 7 brothers who met with a tragedy in their young life, how they had to learn to fend for themselves and their different encounters with love. It is salacious, written in easy to understand diction, it hooks you from the first sentence of the first book, #HlomuTheWife. The writing also includes some saucy language, not for young eyes or minds. If you hear someone talking about “bug-eyes”, this is a phrase easily associated with characters in this series.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
12.                     Zanele Dlamini
I read Zanele’s #Plumeria, the story of 3 friends; Zakithi, Ntokozo and Pinky. By far the most confusing book I've ever read. I read an edition that I was advised has since gone through improvements so I'm sure the latest edition flows better.

Of course it may very well be my own shortcomings that prevented me from following the story because of the way it is structured and narrated.

What other readers said about it;

Lorraine Sithole said “A difficult read for me but I persevered. Experimental Fiction is a newish genre which I absolutely love, but the quotes, lyrics, SMS messages, emails and blogs from the internet threw me off a bit. Seemed like overkill.”

Zola Mkhize said “Oh my word. This book is amazing. I just started reading it yesterday but I have cried because almost everything was happening to Zakithi, has happened to my aunt and I was there through it all.”
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links

13.                     Yvonne Maphosa
What readers said about #TheYinYourManIsSilent;

Mel Tinotenda said “I couldn't put it down the moment I started reading it.. So captivating I felt like I was a part of Fierce's life and wanted to know what happened next.. I'll read it over and over again that's how good it is”

Noluthando Madlala said “Absolutely one of the best reads, I couldn't put the book down, even when I read it for the second time ....and I don't mind the thickness of the book, all the better for me..”
The Y in your Man is silent

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links

14.                     Sizwile Sibindi
I read a sample of Zwi’s book #GoodGirl and I discovered that it is the story of a Zimbabwean girl who was raised by strict parents who policed everything about her life..., that is until she went away to university in South Africa. A smattering of strong language was encountered on the sample I read.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links

15.                     Gudani Raulisa
I have yet to read Gudani’s offering in #TheYearOfFire.
Here is a hook element from the blurb of the book on a readers’platform
“Gudani Raulisa weaves a heart-wrenching tale of gender disparities against an apprehensive backdrop of cataclysm and student politics, eliciting key reflections on the state of gender relations in our society”
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You can see his books, as well as get in touch with him on the below links
16.                     Pumza Shabangu
If you are looking for LGBTQ+ love, then Pumza’s #UnspokenTruth is a read you will love to discover. And if you love explicit intimate scenes, then this appetite is well satiated in the book. There is very strong language in the book, so it is not for the prudish.

What readers have said;
Gwen Knights said “This book changed my outlook on life, it challenged my thinking and open me up to the raw truth, we as society rather sweep underneath the carpet, I appreciate how the author doesn't hold back... A damn good read. Black girls rock”
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
17.                     Simphiwe Molaba
I have not yet read Simphiwe’s book #SiyaAndFifi, but from what I have heard, as the book was being discussed by those who have read the book, one of the main characters is a detective. So you know there’s bound to be danger and suspense, a thrill ride kind of love affair and mysteries uncovered in the process. It is a fairly recent release that you can be one of the first few to discover and recommend to your friends after.

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
18.                     Ntombi Sibande Letlojane
What readers have said about Ntombi’s #OnlyLove

Fellow author Mamotladi said “Only Love is a story of true, genuine love for fellow human beings. It is a tale of forgiveness, of letting go, gracefully. I'm glad I stuck with the book even after the proofreader in me noticed some errors because the story got more and more interesting & unpredictable, with clever and creative twists & turns. At the end it kept drawing me to read the next chapter, and I finished it in 3 days. Karma is also real in Letlojane's book, and I found that satisfying. It would make for a gripping radio/tv drama”
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
19.                     Leeto Mshweshwe
I have not read Leeto’s #RideWithMe, but from what I understand, it is the story of Aphendule, a young and ambitious woman who strongly believes in tradition, culture and yet is independent. She picks her man based on his demonstrated ability to introduce himself, as well as how he carries himself.

It is clear that she is a woman who knows what she wants. But we all know that sometimes things are not what they seem and it is not always that the first impression is the one that lasts. Join her as she rides this man’s taxi, in a quest to get to know him better.

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
20.                     Tirelo Ole Makgeledisa
Deborah Du Plooy said about the book “Wish the cover was on here. Enjoyed the re-release”

Tirelo writes about her life, the mental and sometimes physical manifestations of seemingly contradictory spiritual callings. The new edition of the book was recently released and based on Deborah’s assertion, plus the title, promises to be an interesting read.

You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links
21.                     Nomathemba Dzinotyiwei
Nomathemba’s book #NoRules is about Pelonomi and her Nigerian hunk, their meeting at an office outing, the turbulent love affair, the ex who shows up just when things are good, the meeting of the two families and the friends that add all the spice to their love life. Also, they speak French to each other to disguise their raunchy over-the-phone conversations during working hours. I enjoyed this book as it was relatively free of the strong language I struggle with so much.
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You can see her books, as well as get in touch with her on the below links

Of course my own work comes highly recommended from yours truly.

What readers have said about my work;

Lorraine said “Wow, a tightly woven love story. Love for self. For siblings. For others. For family. For parents. For friends.

From the beginning, Tumelo sets the tone for the reader. The characters come to life from the first page. Their personalities are built gradually and I felt them grow. Watched them transform from where they were in the beginning to who they grew into at the end of the book.”

Charlie said “I like the way it starts with a slow build up that adds a twist then gets you hooked to the drama each character brings to the storyline.”

Get in touch with me...
@molelekitumelo on insta.