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Reviews for July's People

 July's People magazine reviews

The average rating for July's People based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2010-10-23 00:00:00
1982was given a rating of 5 stars Fred Farid
All the troubles of apartheid-era South Africa are encapsulated in this slim and beautifully-written book. Just when you think that you know the situation, you understand what is going on, the Chief is introduced and you realise that looking at it from the point of view of the (white) Smales and the in-two-worlds view of their ex-'boy' is only the half of it. It's black against white, but not for liberation alone but for power. There are many reviews of the story of July's People. I am glad I didn't read any of them before reading it. The beauty of the book is in the slow reveal, the step-by-step unfolding both in the book and in your mind of how life really could have been without Mandela. The brilliant writing, very controlled and precise, treats the reader as a full participant in the story and leaves far more unsaid than written knowing the reader will fill in the details. Excellent book. This is a good companion book to Doris Lessing's The Grass is Singing which addresses on the domestic level, as July's People does, racism in Zimbabwe, that other greatly problematic southern African country.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-05-10 00:00:00
1982was given a rating of 4 stars Jennifer D Butler
Nadine Gordimer is an award winning South African author of multiple books, and has won the prestigious Booker Prize. In July's People, Gordimer writes of the 1980 race riots in Johannesburg that wrestled the city out of white control. As the violence begins to escalate and the city begins to crumble, families ponder their future. Gordimer writes of the Smales family and their house servant named July, who rescues them and offers them hope moving forward. An upper class family, Bamford and Maureen Smales have traveled the world, staying in upper class hotels without thinking about money. Having much disposable income, the Smales often give away used household items to July, their trusted house employee for fifteen years. In a balance of power, July has none, relying on the Smales' for a pay check and his family's subsistence. As soon as Johannesburg falls prey to rioting, July offers to bring the Smales to safety in his village some 600 kilometers away. With many of their friends being killed or fleeing the country, the Smales entrust their survival to July, ensuring that they will be part of the new South Africa moving forward. Upon their arrival in July's village, the balance of power shifts. Living in primitive huts, bathing in rivers, hunting daily for food, the Smales are immediately out of their comfort zone. July's wife and mother resent these people's presence, as they have taken up residence in a hut that once belonged to villagers. Not being part of July's life in the city, they question why he would bring white people to the bush rather than letting them stay with their own people, not realizing how dangerous it is to return to the city. Used to the comforts of home, the Smales find it difficult to get used to village life, especially as they stand out there. The children view the village as an adventure or as camping but the adults wonder what Johannesburg will be like when they return. Meanwhile, July desires that the Smales treat him with increased respect, especially in light of his bringing them to safety. This is the first of Gordimer's books that I have read although I doubt it will be the last. Her language is soothing yet descriptive as she describes life in the African bush. She gives insight into the race rioting that inevitably lead to the crumbling of colonial South African rule. Prior to the riots, the best blacks could expect was to work in menial labor like July did. Following the rioting, they expected to be treated as equals to and given access to the same rights as whites. This event is high lighted in the shifting of power in the relationship between July and the Smales family, one that most likely was duplicated throughout South Africa. I found July's People to be a fascinating book as my reading continues to take me all over the globe. I felt that Gordimer produced quality historical fiction as she touched on Stephen Biko landing in prison and the Smales wondering what life will be like after the riots. Race relations in South Africa continues to be a contested issue to this day as there are often reports of violence there. Another book that was not on my radar before this year, I found July's People to be evocative and rate it 3.8 solid stars.


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