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Bhlawa's Inconsolable Spirits

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“I have lived in Bhlawa all my life, from the day or night I was born in Madala Street. I've visited different places in the world—towns, rural homesteads, big cities—but never for too long, and ve...
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  • 12 January 2027
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“I have lived in Bhlawa all my life, from the day or night I was born in Madala Street. I've visited different places in the world—towns, rural homesteads, big cities—but never for too long, and very rarely. But rather, like a ship that is hauled with long ropes over a treacherous sea, I have been moored to this singular harbor of a township inhabited by drowning men.”

In this startling, poetic, and often graphic memoir, Mxolisi Nyezwa explores a life shaped by, and lived within, a South African township. Determined to understand everything, a young boy turns to writing to “train himself to see.” In his poetic visions, no boundaries exist between imagination, survival, spiritualism, spirituality, and economic political violence. As Mxolisi wanders the streets of Bhlawa, the seen and unseen haunt him, educate him, and, ultimately, define him.

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Price: $19.95
Pages: 162
Publisher: Catalyst Collective
Imprint: Catalyst Collective
Publication Date: 12 January 2027
Trim Size: 8.00 X 5.25 in
ISBN: 9781967673087
Format: Paperback
BISACs: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Memoirs, Autobiography: religious & spiritual, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / African American & Black, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Cultural & Regional, MIND, BODY, SPIRIT / Spiritualism, Afro-American / African diaspora religions, Autobiography: general
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MXOLISI NYEZWA was born in 1967 in New Brighton, South Africa. He is the author of three books of poems in English—Song Trials (2000), New Country (2008), and Malikhanye (2011)—and a book of Xhosa poems, Ndiyoyika (2016). His poetry has appeared in many anthologies in South Africa and internationally. In 1997, Nyezwa founded the multilingual cultural journal Kotaz, which he still edits, and he is also a publisher of books in Xhosa under the imprint Imbizo Arts. He runs a small business and urban chicken farm in Motherwell, outside Gqeberha, South Africa.