Another Year in Africa

A$19.95

Rose Zwi

They came from the stetl to a new land, to a new life. Another year in Africa, they said, another year in exile. Old bonds break as they adjust from the old world of pogroms to their new life in Africa. Six-year-old Ruth is haunted by memories of tragedy and persecution that are not even hers. Award-winning author, Rose Zwi, evokes with tenderness the 1930s and 40s with a tale of loss of innocence alongside the stirrings of Apartheid.

1995 | ISBN 9781875559428 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 172 pp

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Rose Zwi

They came from the stetl to a new land, to a new life. Another year in Africa, they said, another year in exile. Old bonds break as they adjust from the old world of pogroms to their new life in Africa. Six-year-old Ruth is haunted by memories of tragedy and persecution that are not even hers. Award-winning author, Rose Zwi, evokes with tenderness the 1930s and 40s with a tale of loss of innocence alongside the stirrings of Apartheid.

1995 | ISBN 9781875559428 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 172 pp

Rose Zwi

They came from the stetl to a new land, to a new life. Another year in Africa, they said, another year in exile. Old bonds break as they adjust from the old world of pogroms to their new life in Africa. Six-year-old Ruth is haunted by memories of tragedy and persecution that are not even hers. Award-winning author, Rose Zwi, evokes with tenderness the 1930s and 40s with a tale of loss of innocence alongside the stirrings of Apartheid.

1995 | ISBN 9781875559428 | Paperback | 200 x 130 mm | 172 pp



Awards

1980 Winner, Olive Schreiner Award
1995, The Australian's Best Books of the Year


Reviews

A tender, richly detailed and engrossing novel.

–Elaine LindsayThe Year's Best Books, Australian 1995

...Through a tidy triptych of three men and their families, Zwi presents the immigrant Jews' struggles to root themselves in their adopted home... she finds a deft, tender voice in recounting the personal, familial events, capturing the pathos if not the turbulence of this unique chapter in South African Jewish history.

–Publishers Weekly