frieda_and_min_jooste
2001 Nominated

Frieda and Min

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

When Frieda first met Min, with her golden hair and ivory bones, what struck her most was that Min was wearing a pair of African Sandals, the sort made out of old car tyres. She was a silent, unhappy girl, dumped on Frieda’s exuberant family in Johannesburg for the summer of 1964 so that her flighty mother could go off with her new husband. In a way, Min and Frieda were both outsiders – Min, raised in the bush by her idealistic doctor father, and Frieda, daughter of a poor Jewish saxophone player who lived almost on top of a native neighborhood.

The two girls, thrown together – the ‘white kaffir’ and the poor Jewish girl – formed a strange but loyal friendship, a friendship that was to last even though Frieda chose to follow the conventional path that was expected of her, while Min felt compelled to devote herself to working in a bush clinic, leading to terrible years of oppression and betrayal.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Pamela
Jooste

Pamela Jooste (born Cape Town) is a South African novelist. Her first novel, Dance with a Poor Man’s Daughter, won the 1998 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, best first book, Africa, and the Sanlam Prize for Fiction. She worked for Howard Timmins publishers, and BP Southern Africa.

Pamela Jooste (born Cape Town) is a South African novelist. Her first novel, Dance with a Poor Man’s Daughter, won the 1998 Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, best first book, Africa, and the Sanlam Prize for Fiction. She worked for Howard Timmins publishers, and BP Southern Africa.

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
South Africa
Author
Publisher
Transworld Publishers

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