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Frieda And Min
Frieda And Min
Jul 8, 2025 10:50 AM

Author:Pamela Jooste

Frieda And Min

When Frieda first met Min, with her golden hair and ivory bones, what struck her most was that Min was wearing a pair of African sandals, the sort made out of old car tyres. She was a silent, unhappy girl, dumped on Frieda's exuberant family in Johannesburg for the summer of 1964 so that her mother could go off with her new husband. In a way, Min and Frieda were both outsiders - Min, raised in the bush by her idealistic doctor father, and Frieda, daughter of a poor Jewish saxophone player who lived almost on top of a native neighborhood. The two girls, thrown together - the 'white kaffir' and the poor Jewish girl - formed a strange but loyal friendship, a friendship that was to last even through the terrible years of oppression and betrayal during the time of South Africa under Apartheid.

Reviews

'Perceptive and sensitive and extremely funny'

—— Isobel Shepherd-Smith , The Times

'One of the new breed of women writers in South Africa who are telling our story with such power and talent'

—— Cape Times

'A novel that everyone should read..has that rare ability to be both moving and funny...deserves all the praise that it will surely get' 

—— Pamela Weaver , Examiner

A brilliant, mind-expanding and wildly original novel

—— CHRIS CLEAVE

What a ferociously talented writer Susan Barker is. The Incarnations is a hallucinatory ride. Highly recommend

—— ANNA HOPE, Author of WAKE

Remarkable - ambitious in scope, painstakingly researched and most importantly, a gripping read.

—— Publishing Perspectives

Letters from someone who claims to have known him for 1,000 years unsettle a cabbie.

—— The Observer

A MUST-READ - July picks

—— Marie-Claire Magazine

Ambitious in scope, scholarly in depth, and absolutely rivetting ...Sure to make an impact and she deserves all the praise - and most likely prize(s) - that will follow.

—— South China Post

Light and often witty ...There is tragedy, though perhaps not where the reader expects it, but there is also hope.

—— www.thatsmags.com China

Invigorating. To recreate convincingly a single historical period is an achievement. To recreate six is to approach virtuosity ... Deft, smart, various and warm: a very good book indeed.

—— Sunday Business Post, Ireland

Multi-layered and masterful. Suspend your disbelief, flow along with this wonderful book.

—— Guardian

Stunning. Moving between Wang's many pasts, all of them thrilling, gruesome, and tragic, and Wang's increasingly desperate present, Barker's historical tour de force is simultaneously sweeping and precise. Barker's psychologically nuanced characters and sharp wit turn the bleakness and the gore into something seriously moving. Effortlessly blends the past with the present, dark humour with profound sadness. A deeply human masterpiece.

—— Kirkus

Not since Jung Chang's WILD SWANS has there been such a visceral re-telling of the old days.

—— Open Magazine, India

Barker resembles David Mitchell in the ability to weave together past and present in a convincing, and ultimately intriguing, manner

—— Sydney Morning Herald

China reels with tension

—— LA Review

This is a beautifully structured novel, and the interspersed letters describing previous lives are engrossing and sharp. These past lives are too real to feel like mere metaphor. Cruelty, betrayal and slavery reoccur over the centuries, and are echoed in Wang’s modern life.

The prose is light and often witty, and the characterization is one of the book’s most impressive aspects… This is an extremely satisfying and intelligent book

—— That’s Shanghai

A wonderful piece of historical/fantasy/suspense fiction unlike anything else I've read... Constantly unpredictable and surprising

—— Goodreads

Barker is a phenomenal storyteller. She time-travels seamlessly from the Tang Dynasty in AD 632 to contemporary Beijing and each snippet of each incarnation, rich in convincing detail, is utterly mesmerising

—— Goodreads

Barker has created a set of characters who jump off the page and Wang's heartrending story is sensitively told

—— madabouthebooks.co.uk

Seamlessly weaving Chinese folklore, history, and literary classics, The Incarnations is a taut and gripping novel that sheds light on the cyclical nature of history and it hints that the past is never truly settled.

—— Fantastic Fiction

Remarkable... a time-bending fantasy with an unknown (and possibly unreliable) narrator sweeping us down the rabbit hole of history

—— http://granitestudio.org/

Vivid and engaging

—— Asia Review of Books

The Incarnations is so many stories wrapped into one astounding tale, and the end result is nothing short of a masterpiece. Susan Barker takes us on a breathtaking tour of China's chequered history, and her literary prowess is a thing of beauty.

—— aworldchild.co.uk

The best English-language novel about China I have ever read.

—— Shenzhen Stuff

Engaging, poetic and lyrical... Individually, the historical chapters are compelling, interesting short stories; together you have a novel I want to read with a book club and discuss, discuss, discuss

—— The Star Online

Balances past and present, the grand sweep of history and the intensely personal, all wrapped up in brisk and densely evocative prose. You can never quite be sure where Wang's story is going to turn next - not even after a thousand years.

—— welovethisbook.com

A towering, sweeping ode

—— thatsmag.com

So alive, so visceral. Every incarnation is raw and vicious. Just amazing. For fans of David Mitchell and Murakami

—— Time Out Bookstore NZ

Barker is a brilliant prose stylist and this book should be read out loud. Even some of the most minor details are charged with social and historical insight... a genuine page turner that brings it all together quite unlike any other book about China published in the past decade.

—— thenanfang.com

Page-turning. A very memorable read.

—— Publishers Weekly

Engrossing. Barker's writing is fluid, and the plotlines and characterizations found in her historical tales, while dark and sinister, are nonetheless intriguing. Misunderstandings abound throughout the novel to unravel the past that collides intensely with the present, ultimately leading to a disquieting finale.

—— Library Journal

Dazzling ... her natural storytelling gifts shine from every paragraph

—— NEW YORK TIMES

Brutal yet seductive, this journey through the darkest parts of the human spirit will leave readers with chills running down their spines.

—— SHELF AWARENESS

Barker skilfully combines history, the supernatural and the everyday in a novel that suggests the apst is never really past, while providing a cracking good read.

—— BOOKPAGE

A deeply human masterpiece.

—— KIRKUS STARRED REVIEW

[A] kaleidoscopically imaginative novel…Barker stitches together an unnervingly perceptive portrait of China and of the enduring influence that its past has on the present.

—— The New Yorker
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