June Drummond - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
June Drummond (1923 - ).
From a review of Loose Cannon (2003) by Margaret
von Klemperer.
It was back at the end of the fifties that June Drummond
parcelled up the
manuscript of her first novel - pages and chapters all
unnumbered - secured the
parcel with colourful, sticky Christmas tape and sent it
off to the
predominantly Jewish firm of Victor Gollancz.
'I made all the mistakes,' she says. But it hardly
mattered; Gollancz accepted
the book. It was the start of a long partnership, with
Gollancz publishing
Drummond's thrillers and romances until the firm was taken
over as part of the
huge changes that have swept across the publishing scene.
Drummond has shown
more staying power than her publisher: this year will see
her 80th birthday and
has already seen the publication by English publishing
house Robert Hale of
Loose Cannon, her 16th thriller.
In 1998, Drummond decided that she was going to retire
from writing. She and her
sister moved into a flat on Durban's Berea and she decided
to have a restful
life - if being a lay minister and playing bridge allowed
time for it.
'But I always had the itch to write,' she says. 'It's like
an athlete, you still
think you can run a marathon at 90.' But, unlike the
athlete, she can. Although
Drummond says the world she writes about and the world of
publishing have both
changed, she has proved that she can still write
successfully, for all that she
refers to her post-retirement writing as her 'second
childhood'.
Drummond enjoys both writing and research but admits that
the latter can be so
interesting that it leads her off into byways that are of
no use for the book on
hand. But a writer must be accurate.
'I learnt that with my first book. I wrote about some make
of car - a Maserati,
I think - and mentioned the magneto. As soon as it was
published, I got a letter
telling me that the car I described doesn't have one.
You've got to get it
right.'
Drummond was living in London when she started her writing
career. She was
Secretary to the Church Adoption Society and in her time
there saw over 1000
children adopted. She enjoyed the work and used it for the
basis of her second
novel. It was a time, before the Pill or legalised
abortion, when there were
many unwanted babies.
Drummond left Britain in 1960 and, over the Tannoy system
on the mail ship
carrying her home to Durban, heard the announcement of the
Sharpeville massacre.
As she stepped off the ship, her mother met her with the
announcement that a new
political party was having its first meeting in Durban
that night and that
Drummond had better go along. So she attended the first
meeting of the
Progressive Party and found herself sucked into the
politics of the time.
Drummond worked for what was then the Durban Indian Child
Welfare Society and
found that the divisions within South Africa hindered the
adoption work they
were trying to do. 'It was very difficult to do it right
when fighting
injustices at the same time,' she says.
Drummond may have been drawn into South Africa's politics
but they were one
subject writers were advised to steer clear of. She says
her first novel was
'anti-apartheid in a mild, beginnerish way' and as such
appealed to the
flamboyant Victor Gollancz, a supporter of Africa's
freedom struggles at the
time. 'But publishers switched off on Africa for a long
time; they felt that
critics and readers heaved a sigh when they picked up a
book about apartheid.'
It was a situation that has taken a long, long time to
start changing. And it
meant that Drummond wrote about other things.
Drummond is coming up to her half-century of published
writing and shows no sign
of stopping. She laughs when she says that maybe her
forthcoming 80th birthday
will bring in more readers.
'People will either say I must be mad to go on, or let's
see how she does it.'
And she does it very well. Selected WorkFrom The Black Unicorn (1959)
The week before Max St. Cyr died, the
temperature touched one hundred and ten in the shade. No
wind stirred the
vineyards. Extra fire-watchers patrolled the pinewoods
above the house. The
stable cat crackled with electricity. This weather,
unseasonable in the spring
of the year, broke in a storm that rushed down into the
Constantia Valley with a
brilliance of hooves and a whipping wet mane. Steam rose
from the fields like a
sigh of relief.
Sometimes I think that that week of intolerable heat
contributed to Max's death,
crystallising emotions that had been boiling up for
months. During the past two
years I've thought a good deal about the past, wondering
where I made my
mistakes. I brought Max up, helped to shape his character.
I'm old. I can
remember-oh, a long way back.
It was sixty years ago when I first came to Arcenciel, and
I was sixteen years
old. My hard round hat cut into my forehead, and my
sister's boots one size too
small made each step a torture. I remember how my father
took my hand, and said
'Look, Emma, over the door,' and I looked up and
saw above the carved fruits and
goddesses the motto '?? corps perdu, with might and
main.' My father was a quiet
man, a scholar who taught in the school for coloured
children on the St. Cyr
estate. He'd a cool Scandinavian head from his
grandmother, but I took after my
mother's people, and I think he was afraid the streak of
silliness in me would
lose me my chance of success.
He needn't have worried. Rebellion throve in the soil of
Arc-en-ciel. The first
St. Cyr to arrive in the Cape of Good Hope was an outcast,
expelled from
Catholic France for his Protestantism, from Holland for
his debts, and from
England for his political miscalculations. He bobbed up in
Table Bay about the end of the seventeenth century, and some
years
after his arrival
obtained a grant of land between Constantia Nek and Tokai,
in a valley of rich
promise, grazed by heraldic beasts, and sweet with strange
flowers that grow
nowhere else in the circumference of the world.
On the day he laid the foundations of his farmhouse, there
was a storm, and when
it passed he saw that a rainbow stood across his land,
ending, it seemed, at his
boundary. He called the house Arc-en-ciel. The years added
lustre to it, the St.
Cyrs became important economically, politically, and
socially.
Their motto was well chosen. I came, in my squeaky boots,
to a home where it was
considered normal to live ?? corps perdu; to seek
knowledge, to govern, love,
fight and laugh with all one's strength. Any small
rebellions I might have
raised were small grapes in those vineyards. Bibliography1959. The Black Unicorn. London. Victor Gollancz
1961. Thursday's Child. London. Victor Gollancz
1962. A Time to Speak. London. Victor Gollancz
1964. Welcome, Proud Lady. London. Victor
Gollancz
1965. Cable Car. London. Victor Gollancz
1967. The Saboteurs. London. Victor Gollancz
1969. The People in the Glass House. London. Victor
Gollancz
1974. The Boon Companions. London. Victor
Gollancz
1974. Drop Dead. New York: Walker
1975. Slowly the Poison. London. Victor Gollancz
1979. The Patriots. London: Victor Gollancz
1985. The Bluestocking : a novel. London : Victor
Gollancz
1993. Hidden Agenda. London : Victor Gollancz
2003. Loose Cannon. London : Robert Hale Ltd - Durban -
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