Harold Strachan - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
zoom
 Strachan in his flat
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from David Evans' review of Way Up, Way Out
Harold Strachan (1925 - ) was Umkhonto weSizwe's
first bomber. Now,
three decades later,
his debut book, Way Up, Way Out, is likely to make
an impact nearly as
explosive, though in an unexpected way. Misleadingly
termed a satirical novel by
the publishers, it is, in fact, the wonderfully scorching
first part of a
semi-autobiographical trilogy. It deals not with bombs and
clandestine
activities, but with growing up in South Africa between
the two world wars.
I had better admit at once that my response is partisan. I
knew Strachan as
Jock, the fellow bandit who taught me the crucial elements
of boepcraft - the
art of surviving in prison - when we shared a cell in
Pretoria Central back in
the 60s.
Brave, tough, resilient, he made my life and those of many
other political
prisoners endurable and even sometimes enjoyable with his
wiliness, his robust
wit and his talent as a raconteur, racy, irreverent, but
always humane. These
gifts are richly on show in this book, which takes its
sensitive yet
unvanquishable protagonist on an eventful journey from
impressionable childhood
to war-ready manhood.
Highlights of this odyssey include Strachan's early years
in Pretoria, diverse
wanderings in the Natal Midlands and the Drakensberg with
mates as alienated and
innocent as himself, a wonderful account of designing a
glider with the
unexpected help of an old San labourer, his
characteristically cunning reaction
to bullying at boarding school, funny-tender vignettes of
sexual initiation and
hilarious adventures with a horse called Mary.
But these "lovely long hours of our childhood"
cannot last, and in the powerful
closing chapters of the book we find Strachan and his
friends training as pilots
for active service with consequences it would be crass to
disclose.
Those who know Strachan's history might be expecting a
book about politics or at
least one with some ideological aims. Refreshingly, it
isn't, although his
antiracism is detectable in the affectionate gusto with
which he depicts his
extensive cast of characters.
It's possible, too, to see the anatomy of the later artist
and resourceful urban
guerrilla in the young Strachan.
But what suffuses this book is Strachan's passion for his
country and its people
and his impulse to reach beyond stereotypes and orthodox
judgments to an
acceptance of South Africa's complex nature and the
unexpectedness which makes
it so fascinating to those who try to understand it.
(Sunday Times Arts & Entertainment, 10 May 1998.)
Selected Workfrom Way Up, Way Out (1998)
Marthe Guldenpfennig made her way past my ouma's house at
80 Koch Street like
the Queen Mary slipping along Merseyside outward bound for
the new world and the
wild free swell of the North Atlantic, without yet the
bone in her teeth, the
modest hiss of her discreet eight-knot wash suggesting the
rustle of Marthe's
tussore silk and taffeta clothing . . . She had about her
the murmur and pulse
of a great ocean liner. Even as she stood motionless, hove
to, you could sense
the low frequency resonance of her throbbing
generator . . . As she glided down
Koch Street Marthe Guldenpfennig would nod as graciously
to the hensoppers as
she would to Professor Gerrit Burt, who lived opposite and
played the Poet and
Peasant Overture on the honderd perdekrag cinema organ in
the City Hall on
Tuesday, lunch time. The right beads, the right tilt of
the hat, the right
carriage of the head and the Gustav Klimt glance: Marthe
Guldenpfening was an
exceedingly elegant woman of sixty.
Anyway so here we all are, and here I am 103 percent in
love, with this awesome
erection under the blankets on this really snoeky night
among the gun logs. I
haul out of my pocket my mondfluitjie, for I'm sleeping in
my clothes Reagan
style, and I play for her, for her only:
Well the first time I went a-hoboin'
I took a freight trein to see my frien'
She looks long at me and after a bit she says, 'Do you
only play native music?'
and I say 'No, anything really,' because I'm still quite a
lot in love with her,
though the erection is not what it was.
zoom
 Strachan walking down Musgrave Rd
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Bibliography
1998. Way up, Way Out.
2004. Make a Skyf, Man.
For more information please visit
KZN Literary
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