The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Catching Tadpoles: The Shaping of a Young Rebel
by Ronnie Kasrils
(Jacana, £16.95)
“THIS fine book illustrates that [the] rebel child is father to the revolutionary man,” is how writer and anti-apartheid militant Mongane Wally Serote describes this compelling story of Ronnie Kasrils’s early years in South Africa.
Through this memoir of his childhood and youth, Kasrils explores the experiences that impelled the “boykie” from Yeoville, Johannesburg, to become a bolshevik ANC guerrilla, anti-apartheid fighter and underground operative before becoming a government minister in post-apartheid South Africa.
In what’s an absolutely captivating read, he tells the story of the “cheeky chappie” who grew up to become known as the Red Pimpernel for his exploits in the liberation struggle, evading capture by the South African security forces as he did so.
NADIA JOSEPH welcomes a survey of the role that TV played in the debate over apartheid and race relations in Britain
ROGER MCKENZIE recalls the one-in-a-generation communist leader murdered at the dawn of a new South Africa 33 years ago last April 10
ROGER McKENZIE looks at how ancient traditions practiced today can be the cornerstone of anti-imperialism in Africa
The charter emerged from a profoundly democratic process where people across South Africa answered ‘What kind of country do we want?’ — but imperial backlash and neoliberal compromise deferred its deepest transformations, argues RONNIE KASRILS


