Mark Behr (1963–2015)
Autore di The Smell of Apples
Opere di Mark Behr
Opere correlate
Etichette
Informazioni generali
- Nome canonico
- Behr, Mark
- Data di nascita
- 1963-10-19
- Data di morte
- 2015-11-28
- Sesso
- male
- Nazionalità
- South Africa
- Luogo di nascita
- bei Oljorro, Arusha, Tanganjika
- Luogo di morte
- Johannesburg, Südafrika
- Luogo di residenza
- Tanzania
Stellenbosch, South Africa
Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA - Istruzione
- Stellenbosch University
- Attività lavorative
- Schriftsteller
Professor - Organizzazioni
- Rhodes College, Memphis, USA
Utenti
Recensioni
Premi e riconoscimenti
Potrebbero anche piacerti
Autori correlati
Statistiche
- Opere
- 4
- Opere correlate
- 1
- Utenti
- 346
- Popolarità
- #69,043
- Voto
- 3.5
- Recensioni
- 14
- ISBN
- 18
- Lingue
- 4
The Smell of Apples (1993) was Tanzanian-born South African author Mark Behr's debut novel but he wrote only Embrace (2000) and Kings of the Water (2009) before his untimely death at the age of 52. The Smell of Apples won the 1996 M-Net Award* for a novel in English; as well as other South African book awards including the 1994 Eugene Marais Award; and the CNA (Central News Agency) Debut Literary Award. It was also recognised internationally: it won the 1995 Betty Trask Award; it was shortlisted for the Steinbeck Award and it won the 1996 LA Times Book Prize for First Fiction.
The significance of these awards is not to be overlooked. The Smell of Apples was published the year before South Africa had its first democratic elections in 1994, and these awards show that the new South Africa was open to books which interrogated the legacy of apartheid. It's a coming-of-age novel, featuring a boy who hero-worships his father Johan, a General in the army who is mounting covert operations in Angola while publicly denying that they are taking place. And that's not all that's very disturbing about this father...
The apples of the title — sweet, fresh and crisp — are a metaphor for innocence. But apples can be deceptive —they can be rotten inside and can also be tainted if they come into contact with something foul. The ironically named family of Marnus Erasmus is a microcosm of South African society and they represent a family and society defined by racism, hypocrisy and moralising cant. It depicts in hideous clarity how these attitudes were formed, but it also shows that the system is starting to crack. It's not just that the sanctions are starting to bite so there is, for example, petrol rationing, it is also that order in society is starting to break down so that it affects the white minority. There are also challenges to the regime from within their own circle. Family cohesion is breaking down, which is catastrophic for conservative families because their religion values (their version of) 'family life' so highly.
Cultural warning:
Aspects of this review use offensive terminology from the Apartheid era.
The story is told in two time frames: the end of the school year in 1973 when Marnus is just a boy of eight or nine; and in June 1988 when he is a Lieutenant in the South African army, fighting over the border in Angola. As a boy, Marnus has a best friend and 'blood-brother' called Frikkie, and their lives revolve around school, homework, fishing and not getting caught when they get into minor mischief. For Marnus, who has absorbed his authoritarian father's sanctimonious strictures about morality and truth, telling lies about helping Frikkie with maths homework demands an ongoing secret penance in his nightly prayers. Marnus is depicted as a rather nice little boy, whose encounters with others including 'Coloureds' are generally positive. He has mean thoughts about some peers who are less privileged than he is, but he has been taught to keep these unkind inclinations in check.
It is not until late in the novel when he has an encounter with a servant who was sacked for theft that we see his sense of entitlement emerge and recognise the kind of adult he will become. Chrisjan, now a derelict begging on the streets, doesn't recognise Marnus, and Marnus, convinced of his own importance in this wretched man's life, is outraged. He misses Chrisjan and the chats they had in the garden, and considered him to be part of his life, albeit one whose unequal status is never questioned. When this connection is repudiated, Marnus is furious... and he is horribly cruel to this vulnerable man.
Marnus has an older sister called Ilse who is starting to question aspects of the regime that trouble her.
To read the rest of my review please visit https://anzlitlovers.com/2023/03/26/the-smell-of-apples-1993-by-mark-behr/… (altro)