History and heritage
Country of My Skull
Few could bear the relentless testimony, piling horror upon horror. "Some journalists ask to be deployed
elsewhere", Krog writes. "Others start to focus on the perpetrators. Some storm out enraged at parties, or see friends fleeing from them. Some drink deep gulps of neat brandy, others calm themselves with neatly rolled daggazolletjies …
"It is bitterly cold. Coated, scarved, duveted, we listen to one necklacing experience after another - grim stories, a relentless procession of faces in a monotonous rhythm.
"A man testifies about a bomb explosion in his restaurant. He says, 'The reason why only one person died that day is because of the top-quality tables that we have at the Spur.' And I start to laugh. 'My friend came to me and said: Lucas, I wanted to come to you …' '... But I couldn't find my legs,' I say to myself and collapse with laughter.
"A local journalist puts some tea in front of me and asks tentatively: 'Have you been covering the Commission for long?' I take two weeks' leave."
A bestseller in SA and successful abroad, the book has been
reissued with additional material. It is also being turned into a film, currently in production.
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SA struggle biographies
"Our generation is fast disappearing", Nelson Mandela said at the launch of Walter and Albertina Sisulu: In Our Lifetime. But with more and more South African struggle biographies filling the shelves, they are leaving behind a considerable legacy in print.
25 classic South African reads
Snap reviews of 25 South African classics, covering non-fiction, fiction and poetry and featuring a range of the country's greatest novelists, poets, journalists and historians.

