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Innie Shadows
Innie Shadows | Olivia M. Coetzee
2 posts | 1 read
Brittle Paper 100 Notable African Books of 2024 A taut and unsparing novel about a community plagued by violence, drugs, corruption, and prejudice—but where love and justice prevail. The unidentifiable remains of a body are discovered in a field in Shadow Heights, a neighbourhood on the outskirts of Cape Town, South Africa. Ley, the youngest detective at her precinct, is assigned the case and quickly begins her investigation. Soon after, Ley receives a phone call saying that Carl, a friend struggling with a meth addiction, has gone missing after being linked to the Drug King of Shadow Heights. Meanwhile, a local church group believe they are cleansing the area by burning sinners, starting with homosexuals. The search for Carl and the truth leads the reader through the vibrant lives of the residents of Shadow Heights. Violence, poverty, and shame plague the neighbourhood, but there is also love, acceptance, and hope to be found among friends and family in the shadows of everyday life. A pioneering work of fiction in which the dispossessed tell their own stories, Innie Shadows is the first novel to be translated from Kaaps, a dialect of Afrikaans that was until recently a spoken language only.
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CaseyTheCanadianLesbrarian
Innie Shadows | Olivia M. Coetzee
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In unsentimental, spare prose, Coetzee tells the story of two murders in a Cape Town neighbourhood called The Shadows. Coetzee is great at getting the distinct POV of each character from the friend group. The passages from Carl's perspective were particularly gutting: "I always wondered why grownups drank the way they did, until I became a grownup the day mom died." Coetzee originally wrote this novel in Kaaps, a spoken language in South Africa.

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xicanti
Innie Shadows | Olivia M. Coetzee
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Today‘s library haul features two more #AuldLangSpine2025 requests, two from the Canada Reads Longlist, another Junjj Ito collection, Freya Marske‘s latest, a guide to help me plan my time in the Loire Valley, and the first Namibian novel I‘ve had the chance to read.

peanutnine Nice selection! I need to read the new Marske soon, it looks fun 1mo
xicanti @peanutnine it really does. 1mo
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