A perfect example of what literature can give us that history books cannot. Francine Prose,The New York Times Book Review
ANew York Times Book ReviewEditors' Choice
Steve and Jabulile, once clandestine lovers under a racist law forbidding sexual relations between black and white, are living in a newly free South Africa. Both were combatants in the struggle against apartheid, and now, he, a university lecturer, and she, a lawyer, are parents of children born in freedom. But as the ideals of this better life for all are challenged by the realities of the world around them, Steve and Jabulile consider leaving the country they so vehemently fought to free.
The subject inNo Time Like the Presentis contemporary, but Nadine Gordimer's treatment is, as ever, timeless. In the telling of this conflicted couple, she captures the fragmented essence of a nation.
Nadine Gordimer (1923-2014), the recipient of the 1991 Nobel Prize in Literature, was born in a small South African town. Her first book, a collection of stories, was published when she was in her early twenties; she went on to publish more than forty works of fiction and nonfiction.
Her novels include the Booker Prize-winningThe Conservationist, Commonwealth Writers Prize-winningThe Pickup, andNo Time Like the Present.A World of Strangers,The Late Bourgeois World, and the award-winningBurger's Daughterwere originally banned in South Africa. Gordimers short story collections includeLoot,Jump and Other Stories, andSomething Out There. She also published literary and political essay collections such asThe Essential Gesture;Writing and Being, the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures she gave at Harvard in 1994; andLiving in Hope and History.
Ms. Gordimer was a vice president of PEN International and an executive member of the Congress of South African Writers. She was alƒA