Lost and Found in Johannesburg :A Memoir

Lost and Found in Johannesburg

Lost and Found in Johannesburg :A Memoir

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Published: 5 February, 2015
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Description

This is a story of dispossession, a meditation on place, home and identity, as well as a deeply personal account of the social ills of South Africa and the triumph of its people. As a boy growing up in 1970s Johannesburg Mark Gevisser would play 'Dispatcher', a game that involved sitting in his father's parked car (or in the study) and sending imaginary couriers on routes across the city, mapped out from Holmden's Register of Johannesburg. As the imaginary fleet made its way across the troubled city and its tightly bound geographies, so too did the young dispatcher begin to figure out his own place in the world. At the centre of Lost and Found in Johannesburg is the account of a young boy who is obsessed with maps and books, and other boys. Mark Gevisser's account of growing up as the gay son of Jewish immigrants, in a society deeply affected - on a daily basis - by apartheid and its legacy, provides a uniquely layered understanding of place and history. It explores a young man's maturation into a fully engaged and self-aware citizen, first of his city, then of his country and the world beyond. This is a story of memory, identity and an intensely personal relationship with the City of Gold. It is also the story of a violent home invasion and its aftermath, and of a man's determination to reclaim his home town.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781783780990
ISBN10 1783780991
Number Of Pages 368
Item Weight 256 g
Product Dimensions 129 x 198 x 22 mm
Publisher / Reseller Granta Books
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

[Gevisser's] prose style is so fluid, so easy, the reader feels as though he has been taken by the hand and is being gently led down a path by a guide who can be trusted to point out interesting landmarks... A humane and enlightened observer, capturing both an extraordinary chapter of history and the essence of a turbulent, shifting society via the examination of his own life -- Michela Wrong * Spectator *
Part memoir, part psycho-geography, his book is concerned with life as it's lived in these liminal spaces, which in Gevisser's fine handling, take on both physical and symbolic dimensions... A loving portrait of the city -- Emma Brockes * Guardian *
[Its] aesthetic of abundance and openness is powerful... [It] joins a range of experiments in non-fiction from South Africa that are by turns compelling and troubling, generous and chaotic... Brilliant [and] absorbing -- Hedley Twidle * New Statesman *
Rich with South African history... Profound [and] intimate * Economist *
Highly evocative * Bookseller *
[Depicts a] profound sense of place * Sunday Times *
Poignant... Gevisser writes intelligently and honestly, giving us fascinating insights into aspects of South African life during and after apartheid * News Letter (Belfast) *
Fascinating... Part memoir, part psychogeography, his book is concerned with life as it's lived in these liminal spaces, which, in Gevisser's fine handling, take on both physical and symbolic dimensions -- Emma Brockes * Guardian *
He paints a rich and often beautiful portrait of this fiercely optimistic city -- Isaac Benjamin * Jewish Renaissance *

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Author's Bio

MARK GEVISSER is one of South Africa's pre-eminent authors and journalists. His last book, A Legacy of Liberation: Thabo Mbeki and the Future of the South African Dream, won the Sunday Times 2008 Alan Paton Prize. His journalism has appeared in publications and journals including Granta, the New York Times, the Guardian, Newsweek, Vogue, the Wall Street Journal and the Los Angeles Times. He is an Open Society Fellow 2013-2014, and lives in Cape Town.

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