This Book Betrays My Brother

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Winner of the Ottawa Book Award, English Fiction, 2019
Named to Kirkus Reviews’ Best Books of 2018
Named to the Globe 100, 2018
CBC Books, Top YA Pick for 2018
Named to Best Books for Kids and Teens, Fall 2018
Named to Chicago Public Library’s Best of the Best Books, 2018

What does a teenage girl do when she sees her beloved older brother commit a horrific crime? Should she report to her parents, or should she keep quiet? Should she confront him? All her life, Naledi has been in awe of Basi, her charming and outgoing older brother. They’ve shared their childhood, with its jokes and secrets, the alliances and stories about the community. Having reached thirteen, she is preparing to go to the school dance. Then she sees Basi commit an act that violates everything she believes about him. How will she live her life now?

This coming-of-age novel brings together many social issues, peculiar not only to South Africa but elsewhere as well, in the modern world: class and race, young love and physical desire, homosexuality. In beautiful, lyrical, and intimate prose, Molope shows the dilemmas facing a young woman as she attempts to find her place in a new, multiracial, and dynamic nation emerging into the world after more than a century of racist colonialism. A world now dominated by men. There are no simple answers.

Praise for This Book Betrays My Brother:

“This poignant novel presents us with a girl on the cusp of womanhood desperately trying to navigate the dissonant sociocultural imperatives placed on men and women in her society.”
–Kirkus Reviews, starred review ★

“The author examines the many systemic forces involved in maintaining a society that protects its chosen sons as it vilifies its daughters who choose to speak up . . . a timely and worthy choice for any public or school library.”
–School Library Journal

“Molope’s prose is exhilarating and she shines in the development of a character that you not only root for, but are desperate to defend.”
–Quill and Quire, Editor’s Choice

“In the era of Time’s Up and #MeToo, this book is increasingly relevant and manages to handle heavy issues with poignancy and power. Told in a poetic voice, this story engrosses the reader from the beginning, and the last lines carry such an impact they’ll leave the reader feeling forever changed.”
–Canadian Children’s Book News

“The novel delivers an authentic depiction of the complex issues of gender, race, and class in South Africa in an accessible way for readers of all backgrounds. Through Molope’s elegant and effective prose, readers will gain an understanding of culture and community in the place Nedi calls home.”
–CM: Canadian Review of Materials

“A powerful read, This Book Betrays My Brother, covers important topics such as racism, sexism, poverty, and sexual assault.”
–Amy Mathers, National Reading Campaign

“…a beautifully written and absolutely haunting novel.”
Canadian Literature

This Book Betrays My Brother is a masterfully written coming-of-age novel which brings together many ideas and themes: a powerful narrative about our increasingly fissured world.
–Wasafiri

“A beautiful, suspenseful, and heartbreaking novel and performance.”
AudioFile Magazine (reviewing the audiobook)

$12.99$18.95

Ages 14+

Publication Date: May 2018

Paperback ISBN: 978-1-988449-29-6
Page size: 5.25″ x 8.25″
192 pages

eBook ISBN: 978-1-988449-30-2

 

An audiobook of this title is available from ECW Press.

Photo of Kagiso Lesego Molope

Kagiso Lesego Molope was born and educated in South Africa. Her first novel, Dancing in the Dust (Mawenzi House) was on the IBBY Honour List for 2006. Her second novel, The Mending Season, was chosen to be on the school curriculum in South Africa. This Book Betrays My Brother was awarded the Percy Fitzpatrick Prize by the English Academy of Southern Africa, where it was first published. Her latest novel, Such a Lonely, Lovely Road, was released in 2018. She lives in Ottawa.

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