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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Even Angels..., August 18, 2005
By 
metaphortracker (Stellenbosch, South Africa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
Karoo Boy is an ambitious novel, in the sense that it tackles the really big themes that even angels (and definitely first-time novelists) approach with cautious tread: living in apartheid South Africa, growing up to consciousness, love and the loss of it, guilt and death. And yet Troy Blacklaws manages to tame these wild things, and bring them to rest in a compact novel, with a handful of well-drawn characters, surrounded by the vast impersonal canvas of the Karoo.

He is sensitive to the minutiae that make up a life, and he describes these in spare prose that paradoxically becomes lyrical in the repetition of the rhymes: "I paddle out through the ice-tea surf. The rising sun glints in the empty windows of the weekend train to Cape Town. I stand on a borrowed board. No flicks or tricks. The wave barrels. For a moment, I glide. Then the wave tumbles me. I fight it instead of going with it. Have I forgotten everything? I even forgot to dogleash the board to my foot. As I surface I hear the crack of the board on the rock. I wade up out of the water, feeling ashamed."

Karoo Boy is not only a welcome addition to the body of fiction now written by thirty-something South Africans, relating their experiences as teenagers during the unholy hey-day of apartheid. It is also a bloody good story, and it is well told.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful language..., January 8, 2006
By 
K. Villard "kv" (southwestern desert) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
the african setting is poignant, evocative, romantic -- but the author's vocabulary and use of language raises this book to high levels of literary enjoyment...sort of like dylan thomas in its lyricism and poetic achievements...
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic, January 2, 2006
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
This beautifully-written book is full of rich characters and convincing settings, but what makes this book special is the story. The protagonist of this coming-of-age tale (set in the South Africa of 1976) must wrestle with deep and painful problems under adverse circumstances. The ending is a stunner. I reread it within weeks of first reading it. Best book I've read in a long time.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Youth Lost, August 16, 2005
By 
Fern Muleboot (Oberursel, Germany) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
Karoo Boy is a book about growing up - a Bildungsroman that recalls Salinger's Catcher in the Rye with its sinewy language and the imaginative force of its images. Douglas's twin brother is killed in a freak accident in a beach cricket game, a striking image of the shattered social fabric and the brooding violence that lurked beneath the surface in the South Africa of the seventies. His father hops it. Douglas is banished with his mother, their servant Hope and the dog Chaka to the boondocks, far from Cape Town, on the edge of a South African nowhere. The book relates how he slowly comes to terms with his exile and the double loss of his father and his twin brother. Karoo Boy seems almost to glow in the harsh light of the South African veld as the author unwinds the vivid images of a world at the edges of civilisation. The tempo of each chapter is measured, and moves from chord to chord with the precision of a twelve-bar blues. The music of the seventies plays in the background of the book: Neil Young, the Doors, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan. And the writers who form the canon of good literature in white, private schools make up Douglas' education - Paton, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Golding. The world of the growing boy - from the menacing biology lessons, to the pain of a cane on his hand, the sun on his skin, the smells and sounds of the desert, a boy's growing awareness of his own sexuality and his effect on others - are deftly drawn into a complex picture of growing up in this alien environment. Karoo Boy is full of tactile images that light up the prose like a match flare in the dark of night. One of Douglas' first tasks at the new house is to pull a dead jackal out of a rain tub and the reader can feel the huge effort that goes into overcoming the revulsion against the stink of the corpse and having to drag it out of the tub and bury it in the yard. The revulsion takes us back to the death of his brother and insinuates the slumbering threat of violence in the town. In a primitive humiliation ritual of the poofie from the big city, the local rugby-playing jocks at school spike Douglas' peanutbutter sandwich with a dead lizard and then strip him and bundle him into a wicker basket. Douglas emerges, naked, with dogpee dripping form his hair, the personification of the waspy town dweller. But there are also new friends to be made. He meets a Xhosa, a rangy outsider in the outback and they become friends over the rusty body of an old Volvo that makes a striking metaphor for the crumbling Apartheid system. Douglas's girl friend, Marika, comes from a Boer family and her father, obsessed by some ritual of racial purity and ready to kill for the honour of his clan, gives her a thrashing for going with a kaffir and a Cape Town moffie. Another novel with the theme of growing up in an alien environment is Youth by J.M. Coetzee, who describes the London exile of a student from South Africa. The hero is a lonely intellectual who gets involved with women with experience, who reads Rilke and Brecht, Pound and Eliot and longs from afar for the embraces of the beautiful girls in London. But it makes rather dull reading. Coetzee cannot awaken sympathy or liking for his rather dreary hero and if it's meant to be a deadpan version of Decline and Fall the humour is very well hidden. How does Blacklaw's book compare with Coetzee's? Coetzee gives us plenty to brood about - damp summers and disgusting breakfasts, a yearning for affection perennially frustrated by the anxieties of the neurotic girls who cross his path. It's all in the mind with Coetzee, the search for intellectual enlightenment, losing the fight against the earthy marshes of desire. Blacklaws' book is austerely written, with never a wasted word or a jarring image. Blacklaws creates the wide dusty world of the Karoo in a few chosen words and takes us with him on the journey to manhood in the arid wastes of Sharpvilled South Africa. Karoo Boy is a sensitive portrait of a boy struggling to come to terms with a hostile environment, mourning lost male relatives, watching with caution the roughies in the town and discovering the delights of a female body when he goes swimming with Marika. It is a lyrical book, full of striking images that recreate the dusty world of a teenager, full of potential dangers. Blacklaws creates a microcosm of the realities of South Africa in the stifling atmosphere of the seventies and shows us what it was like to be a white exile in a disintegrating environment. Life and death, love and hate are the themes of this fine book - universal statements about the way that South Africans treated each other in days when Nelson Mandela was just another prisoner on Robben Island.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyed it so I would read it again!, September 22, 2009
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
This book is very well written, he has a great style. He paints a picture of africa and the events that are so beautiful and clear. Sadily he hasnt written more.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Colorful Book for Sure!, August 5, 2008
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
I read Karoo Boy with an eye for selecting a novel about other cultures for high school students to read. I devoured the book in one day and was completely swept up in the colorful, descriptive writing and word choices. Now, not being South African myself, I found that I was perplexed by the meaning of many of the words/phrases, but I was usually able to ascertain the meaning from the context of the paragraphs. And I enjoyed rolling the unfamiliar words around on my tongue and guessing at their meaning.

Unfortunately, because I love this book and think many students would feel the same, I don't think I will recommend that this book be placed on the list of "recommended books" for the assignment because of the sexual situations/comments. But I will recommend this book to students who are looking for a good coming-of-age novel, in the same vein of The Catcher in the Rye or The Perks of Being a Wallflower, that aren't using it for a required assignment.

This book has been my favorite summer read and I bet that you will think it is uniquely good, too.
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5.0 out of 5 stars dope, May 8, 2006
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)
Once you start reading, you cannot put this book down. This book is truly a way for people to visit Africa spiritually and experience another culture. Blacklaws' rich and detailed imagery takes readers on a journey of their own; this is probably why Chris Martin the singer of Coldplay said the book was so colourful. To truly enjoy the adventure u must read it with an open mind.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars "The air floats unanchored in space.", September 4, 2005
This review is from: Karoo Boy (Paperback)


"My mother's cry is a sky full of gaping-beaked seagulls." On the Cape in South Africa in 1976, Dee's twin brother is killed in an accident, struck in the head by a ball while playing cricket; the twin loses the other half of himself, his anchor. His mother can't forgive her husband, who threw the ball, determined to make him suffer for the tragedy. The small family unravels after Marsden's death, the parents drifting away from each other in their grief. In Cape Town, "an un-African Africa, death catches the unsuspecting off guard, dealing the cruelest blow." Dee soon realizes that every time his father looks at him, he sees the boy he killed, a constant reminder of his identical twin.

When Dee's mother leaves the Cape for the more rural Klipdrop, south of the Free Orange State border, the white boy finds himself in unfamiliar territory, a Karoo boy. The Freedom Movement has already begun and is growing in momentum, crowds chanting, the authorities responding with violence, bulldozing the Crossroads shanty town. Apartheid has not yet been defeated. Curious about the township, the black shanty town not far removed from the white enclave, the bright-haired Dee wishes to make friends with the Xhosa boys. Dee's new friend, Marika, defies her father to visit the township with the boy. This precipitates a series of unfortunate events, all of which could have been avoided had the adolescents realized the inherent danger they brought along on their excursion.

Caught between his affection for an old garage man, a black appropriately named Moses, and his friendship with Marika, a white girl his age, Dee's wants are few, mainly to live without conflict in his new environment. Moses is a precious commodity, his willingness to make friends with the white boy putting him in constant danger of reprisal, while Marika is careless, impulsive. But Dee hasn't reckoned with the harsh lessons of apartheid. His young world already broken apart by the loss of his twin, Dee's coming-of-age is painful, a rude awakening for a boy of generous heart in an uneasy land. The author sensitively handles his protagonist, exposing the boy's vulnerabilities as he is transplanted from the relative security of Cape Town to the chaos of his new home, where a carefully constructed world is transformed almost overnight and a fourteen-year old boy passes the boundaries from child to man. Luan Gaines /2005.
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Karoo Boy
Karoo Boy by Troy Blacklaws (Paperback - September 15, 2009)
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