The #WeekendRead - Rahla Xenopoulos' Tribe

Rahla shares a part of Tribe, setting up us for a good weekend. There are wildflower-scented soft beaches, the cradling of old friends and the excitement of making new ones. Read on to see, the "Tribe" expanding. 

 

Everyone is in love on MDMA, but this is where it peaks, the big blow-out, Ibiza, July 1997 … the hedonist’s holiday …

Walking up from the beach, Jude hears a girl laughing. He puts down his guitar and stops to listen; the sound inhabits the island like an ancient myth. Such a laugh. Not like his mother who, when amused, emitted what sounded like a nervous hiccupping sound, then scanned the room, checking that no one thought she was being silly.

He looks at the people catching the last of the day’s sun. Is he the only person being enchanted? Maybe the laughter is part of his trip. He walks towards the sound, like a child beguiled by a will-o’-the-wisp.

She opens the door before he knocks. Everything about her is unlike what he’d imagined. Small yet confrontational, she sparkles. A transparent white halter-neck dress, slightly torn and shabby at the hem, hugs her body. Unlike the emaciated grunge girls on the island, her African skin has the luxury of flesh. She doesn’t step aside, but stands in the doorway, inviting him instead to study her as she studies him.

He can’t tell for certain if she’s laughing with him, at him or simply at life. “So you’re the Jude?” She looks him over. “Right, well, come on in, you look like a bit of fun. They’ve been talking about you, incessantly …”

“You’re not …” He looks at her.

She laughs. “No, luv, I’m not ‘The Babe’. That’s Olivia. She’s blonde, beautiful and white. I’m Tselane, her friend.” He follows her hips down a passage. “The real Babe, Olivia, is inside with your mates.”

The house smells of the ocean, and a pungent tuberose perfume. It smells of sex.

Before he sees Benjy’s new girlfriend, ‘The Babe’, or any of his friends, before seeing anything beyond the laughing Tselane, Jude sees a coffee table in the centre of the lounge. It’s got a certain look. He had a theory in first year: if you wanted to analyse a girl, forget Freud, go to her home. Whatever you noticed first symbolised the essence of her character. If it was her music collection, she loved dancing. Books, she didn’t live in this world. Photos, she lived in the past. Bed, she loved to fuck. Once he went to a girl’s place, just one room in student digs, and there in the middle was a four-poster bed covered in pink linen – virgin! It had turned out to be true; she’d arrived at university virginity intact.

And here, first thing he sees in Olivia “The Babe’s” Ibizan holiday villa is a Balinese coffee table. There must be a whole bunch of shit that happens on this table, stuff guys like Jude aren’t included in. Right now, it’s covered in crystals, ashtrays burning with joints, and bottles of Evian water. But Jude imagines it, on other evenings, through different phases, covered with piles of cocaine being snorted by models and rich men. He imagines Olivia dancing on top of it, surrounded by other Eurotrash admiring her as she strips down to a G-string. He wonders what she hides in the table’s two drawers – condoms, photographs of rock stars in compromising positions, old nail polish … this Uberbabe his friend has hooked up with. Benjy’s landed the “It Girl” and she’s crazy for him.

Oh, she’d resisted at first. “I can’t fall in love with you, Benjamin Stone,” she’d said, sipping a mojito back in London.

“Why not?” he’d laughed, knowing she would.

“Because you have the attention span of a Sunday morning.”

“What do you mean?”

“You’ll be easy fun, but inevitably you’ll become Monday.”

She’d been wrong; he’d prove himself as constant as eight days a week.

Tselane pulls Jude by the hand, drawing him into the reality of the room.

“Jude, broe, is that you?” says a man with a thick Afrikaans accent. Hannes comes into the room, not gently like Jude did, but like a force of nature, wearing nothing but a kikoi, his hair wet from the shower. He has a scar running across his muscled chest.

“So good, we’re all here,” Jude says, his eyes smiling.

“So good,” Hannes says, lighting a cigarette, which he holds between his thumb and forefinger.

A mass of blonde hair on the floor turns, revealing the faces of Benjamin and Olivia. She is staggeringly beautiful. It’s not just the obviously high cheekbones or the green of her eyes – there’s warmth in her broad smile. Benjy jumps up off the cushion they were sprawled over. Unconsciously he runs his fingers through his hair, pushing it off his handsome face. “I didn’t think you’d come out to this Sodom with all its Gomorrah.”

“It’s me, I found him,” announces Tselane in a playful voice that surprises Jude but doesn’t seem to surprise the others.

Olivia cracks up. Grasping her friend’s hand, she says, “Did you, T? Did you pick him up off the street? Pull him out of the water?”

He didn’t expect these girls to be funny. Now that she’s standing closer to him, he can smell Olivia’s sophisticated perfume and feel the reverberations of her laughter. Jude sees what really attracts Benjy to Olivia. This laughter. Both girls have great laughs; Olivia’s not as much as Tselane’s, but then, Olivia’s is accompanied by her astonishing beauty.

“I’m so excited to finally meet you. And you have your guitar. Sit down. Ben tells me you serenaded him through childhood,” Olivia says, talking over any shyness he would normally have felt. “I’ll call Pierre off the beach.”

Covered in sand, Hannes’s brother Pierre comes in. His accent isn’t as guttural as Hannes’s, but different as they are, they share a rawness, an Afrikaans honesty, that Jude’s always appreciated. Pierre’s body is more sinewy than Hannes’s, his movements more measured. They’re both sexy, but women have always thought Pierre is less encumbered, less of a risk. Without bothering to shower, Pierre sits down.

Jude’s been at Oxford in a tunnel of studying, cum laude-ing his degree in psychiatry. Pierre and Benjy are riding the same wave, surfing the net, building digital empires; Pierre in Cape Town, Benjy in London. But Pierre will sell out before it crashes.

Café del Mar plays on the stereo, the sliding doors are open and waves break outside. The ease of youth and privilege fills the room.

“So, boet, what have you got to show for yourself?” Hannes asks Jude.

Smiling, Jude pulls a plastic bag containing a white rock out his pocket. “Gram of the finest MDMA on the island. Any of you care to crush it?”

 

Rahla Xenopoulos is the author of A Memoir of Love and Madness and the novel Bubbles. Many of her short stories have been published in magazines and in Women Flashing, Twist and Just Keep Breathing. She lives in Cape Town. Her latest novel Tribe was released to critical acclaim.

#WeekendRead - Juliane Okot Bitek's 100 Days

      This excerpt comes from Juliane Okot Bitek's first published collection is 100 Days. It is a poetic, painful countdown that both pays tribute to and records the horrific Rwandan genocide. It was originally part of a public loose collaboration with Wangechi Mutu, on Facebook.  

 

     Day 98
If this should be a list of betrayals where should we begin?
At last, we’re here
At last, we’re gone
What is this life beyond one hundred days?
What is this life beyond one hundred days, twenty times over?
What days are left?
We were already in medias res
We were always inside one hundred days
.
Day 99
It was sunrise every morning
It was the same land
The same sky
The same rivers, hills, valleys
It was the same road that led away and back home
Same sweet air that amplified the voices through whispers, gossip, airwaves
Words leapt into our eyes and burned this new knowledge that was never new
But it was the earth that betrayed us first
In those one hundred days that would never end
.
Day 100
It was the earth that betrayed us first.
It was the earth that held on to its beauty, compelling us to return.
It was the breezes that were there, and then they were not there.
It was the sun that rose and fell, rose and fell, as if there was nothing different: as if nothing changed.

 

 

Juliane Okot Bitek is a doctoral candidate at the University of British Columbia and a Liu scholar at the Liu Institute for Global Issues. Her latest book of poetry, 100 Days is published by the University of Alberta Press. Her dissertation looks at the impact of forgetting on citizenship. She lives and loves in Vancouver, Canada.

#WeekendRead - Greg Lazarus' award-winning story, 'This Could Get Messy'.

"This Could Get Messy" won the 2016 Short.Sharp.Stories Award and is collected in an anthology of wit, satire and humour called Die Laughing

 

This Could Get Messy

 

Tues, Sept 15, 4:11 PM
Subject: Love

Dear Dr Schiff,

I hope you will forgive my writing to you. I have perused the university website, examined the faces of the philosophers and decided who to contact based on appearance. You may say that it is a shallow and immature method, and you will be right. I am shallow and immature, Dr Schiff, but I am trying to make myself deeper. That is where you come in, if you are willing.

Dear Doctor, tell me truly: how does love arise? As a philosopher, I expect that you have plumbed this profound question. What a moment it will be to receive your response, an oasis in the desert of my routine. Today’s activities: I spent the morning in the clutches of Mrs Baderoon (Noor Ul Islam Girls’ College, Grade 11, the ‘clever class’). This afternoon I played with my little brothers and helped to prepare dinner. Now I shall do my homework, ‘keenly’ (languages) or ‘disappointingly’ (physics, biology, geography, all else). Then TV (with the remote control in the hands of Hamza, my older brother, therefore bad TV). Then bed (with one or two wake-ups, heart thudding, before morning). And the pattern of the days will remain the same until I receive your wisdom.

With kind and respectful and interested wishes,

Ilhaam Nassif

 

Fri, Sept 18, 5:38 PM
Re: Love

Dear Ms Nassif,

Thank you for your email enquiring about love. Unfortunately, I do not deal with love but with issues in the philosophy of mathematics.

However, I would advise that you phone Ms Briggs (ext: 397), the departmental administrative officer, to enquire about our high school philosophy programme. It is offered in March next year and I’m sure you will find it most stimulating.

Kind regards,

Gary Schiff

 

Fri, Sept 18, 6:47 PM
Re: Love

Dear Dr Schiff

Thank you for your message, but I sadly cannot wait for your classes next year. I am at a crossroads. Matters are to be decided very soon.

I understand that you are not a philosopher of love, but I found no philosophers of love on the university website. Hence, I had to choose another. Your picture indicated to me a person of substance, of feeling. I am highly intuitive.

Our school motto, in case you are interested, is ‘Knowledge is Light’. A thought: what is the point of light, if you are not willing to share it?

Kind regards, and apologies for my extreme rudeness, which I unfortunately cannot entirely help, because I am uncorrectable, according to my mother, teacher and (few) friends,

Ilhaam Nassif

 

Mon, Sept 21, 9:25 AM
Re: Love

Dear Ms Nassif,

Thank you again for your message. To clarify: in any academic field, including philosophy, one specialises. Some philosophers are professionally interested in emotional topics, but my own focus is on mathematics and logic. As you will appreciate, these are quite different realms. Perhaps speaking to your parents and teachers could be a good start.

Good wishes,

Gary Schiff

 

Mon, Sept 21, 4:55 PM
Subject: Misled by beard?

Dear Dr Schiff,

Forgive me, but have I been misled by your beard? It seemed to me a warm and welcoming beard – I have studied a number of them, and they are not always pleasant – and I sensed that its owner would be forthcoming. Perhaps the problem is really that I have not explained myself in detail. In one month, an ‘excellent’ young man, the first cousin of a colleague at my mother’s work, will be coming from a distant country (Australia) to visit me. Intention: marriage. He has seen a photograph, and believes that I would make a suitable wife. I too have seen his picture. I cannot tell much from it, or from the fact that he lives in a house of his own and works for Australia’s second-largest bank. My mother says that I am a romantic, that I have been reading the wrong books, that I need to listen to centuries of good sense, and that in the absence of my father her wishes for me are to be given very great weight.

With my teacher I cannot discuss such matters. If you knew Mrs Baderoon, you would understand.

Eager regards,

Ilhaam

 

Tues, Sep 22 at 8:47 AM
Subject: Contact Details

Dear Ms Nassif,

Dr Schiff has passed on your contact details to me. I am pleased to say that you have been added to our contact list for First Steps in Philosophy, our programme for high school students.

I am about to leave the departmental administrative team, but you can rest assured that my successor will be delighted to send you details in due course.

Best wishes,

Melanie Briggs

 

Tues, Sep 22 at 11:53 PM
Subject: Lava

Melanie,

It can’t be over. This morning in the shower I was soaping myself and I saw your hands, with those nails of sullen fire. Red hair, white skin, lava nails. Jesus.

You’re right, it’s a mess. I have to see you again. I’m going to be at the airport on Sunday morning just before nine. If it has to be over, at least let me look at you one more time.

 

Always,

G

 

Tues, Sep 22 at 11:57 PM
Re: Lava

Dear Dr Schiff,

I believe you may have sent this message to the incorrect address. I am not Melanie, of course.

Kind regards,

Ilhaam

 

Wed, Sep 23 at 7: 15 AM
Subject: Apology

Dear Ms Nassif,

My apologies. Yes, it was a private message, intended only for the addressee. Please could you simply delete it from your mailbox.

Regards,

Gary Schiff

 

Wed, Sept 23, 4:15 PM
Re: Apology

Dear Dr Schiff,

I will certainly delete it.

Ilhaam

P.S. The Quran: ‘Allah will not give mercy to anyone, except those who give mercy to other creatures.’ You would be doing a great mercy to offer a word or two in assistance.

 

Wed, Sept 23, 5:47 PM
Subject: Question

Dear Ms Nassif,

Since you are clearly deeply engaged with your issue, I will set aside what small portion of time I have for discussion, to the extent that I am competent. Please could you explain, as clearly and precisely as possible, the question you have in mind?

Best wishes,

Gary Schiff

 

Wed, Sept 23, 7:48 PM
Subject: How does love arise?

Dear Dr Schiff,

Thank you so much! In response to you, I feel as though I could write for hours. But my sense is that you are looking for succinctness, and so I shall rein myself in. Fortunately, my education has emphasised discipline.

Remark number 1 (to introduce a little mathematics, for your interest):

My question demands a certain amount of background. Otherwise it will be comprehensible only on the shallowest level. Let me take the time machine seven years back, to fourth grade, one drowsy afternoon at my after-school religious class. I was reciting a verse from the Quran when I noticed that my teacher was smiling into the air, like he’d seen some kind of friendly ghost. After class he came over and said that he was going to call my father. ‘It’s a good thing, Ilhaam,’ he reassured me.

At home my parents were together in the sitting room. My father hadn’t yet gone off to his night shift; I had caused him to wait, which was unusual because his young girl was maybe not the highest on his list of priorities. My mother said, ‘Your teacher has honoured us. He tells us that you have something of the sakinah in you, and he suggests that you take the path of the hafiz.’ My father said, ‘It’s not a good idea for a girl in grade four. It’ll take – what – five, six years? – and during that time she won’t be studying anything else, so she’ll be behind in her work. It’ll be hard to catch up when she goes back to school.’

I remember the way my mother looked at him, like he didn’t get it. She didn’t bother to argue with him. That’s my mother: what is resolved is resolved. She just stared at him, shook her head – my mother and my father, that’s a huge book in itself, to rival the nineteenth century novels in the public library, except that in their case there was a divorce – and then turned back to me.

‘Ilhaam,’ she said, ‘this is a big moment. We don’t have a hafiz in the family, you know that. I started, but then things got in the way. Marriage, children – ’ She stared at my father; he was clearly to be implicated in this. ‘I started too late. And you have the sakinah in you, just as I had.’

The sakinah – the spirit of peace? Me??

‘This must be her decision,’ my father said. This time my mother probably didn’t bother to look at him, but she did say, ‘Yes, your decision. And how you decide is going to change your life. Do you have what it takes to learn the entire Quran by heart? To take the sacredness into your heart?’

In the silence I wondered what to do. The room seemed brighter than usual, and I was at the centre. I realised that the room was brighter for a reason – the light came from a special source. I’ve thought back again and again on that illuminated room. As I sat there, with my father saying in the background, well, if she does this thing, she has to study the sciences also, that’s something you must keep up with or you lose it – as I sat there, that was probably the happiest I’ve been.

If love is anything like this feeling, Dr Schiff, it is not easy to imagine that I will come to love the Australian who is due to begin his journey towards me in one month’s time. But am I wrong? Which is why I ask: how does love arise?

(Remark number 2: I try to be dutiful, but I am also hoping to be happy. If duty conflicts with happiness, must duty always win? Can happiness be allowed a victory?)

Even a single drop of help will be precious,

Ilhaam

P.S. After all, mathematics is not really that far from holiness. We come to learn something that is true beyond doubt, that could not possibly have been otherwise. Surely human beings working on their own could not acquire knowledge so profound. It is incredible that we can be guided to mathematics, except by divine grace. I imagine that you are well aware of this, of course, being a philosopher of mathematics.

 

Thurs, Sept 24, 1:53 PM
Re: How does love arise?

Dear Ms Nassif,

Thank you for the message. You suggest that love is something like a revelatory religious experience. I suppose it can be that, but it need not be. Perhaps love can be of a more grounded kind, based on a strong commitment to someone. If that’s the case, then maybe it can arise simply from living together, without any single moment of revelation.

Of course, you may not wish to marry and live with this man, in which case I suggest that you explain your reservations to your mother.

Best wishes, whatever your decision,

Gary Schiff

 

Thurs, Sept 24, 5:47 PM
Subject: More questions than answers

Dr Schiff, your message raises so many questions that I can barely keep still. To take just one: is ‘commitment’ love as valuable as the ‘revelation’ kind? (Is it, maybe, more valuable?)

I must reveal more. I tried to withhold it, but your penetrating line of thought has forced it from me. Remember when I was telling you about the ‘happiest I’d ever been’ – does that make sense? How can it? I was embarking on a sacred project that brings serenity and joy, so how could my peak of happiness have been the moment before the project began? I will tell you.

After my father had contacted my teacher, after the mutual expressions of happiness at my wise choice, after – I must admit – my pleasurable leave-taking from the school, where I had begun to feel slightly bored – I found myself within a few weeks at the hafiz school, where my teacher was waiting for me. This was different from my usual school: no big class, this time, just me and two others, both teenagers. It was nine o’clock in the morning, and the day stretched before us.

‘Excuse me,’ I said very politely, ‘my father said that I was also to learn the sciences, so I am just mentioning that to you if you don’t mind.’

‘Of course you will do some science,’ said my teacher. ‘We are not here to deprive you of any knowledge of the pattern that the almighty has laid down on the world.’

It was a dazzling thought. That science too was divine. My teacher seemed to notice my dazzlement – he was a person who saw into those he taught, and drew out the best from them.

‘Now, how shall we begin?’ he asked the class. The other girls, who were fifteen years old to my ten, waited to be instructed, but I flatter myself that they did so without my eagerness. I was straining to begin, though I kept my face composed.

‘We could begin at the beginning,’ my teacher said. ‘That is the logical place to start. Or we could try something else. When you are faced with a glittering sea of beauty, you may wish to greet it not by immersing yourself slowly, but by diving in and swimming deep, searching for the greatest treasures. So let us begin by holding in our hands a gem. Who knows Ayat An-Nur, the Verse of Light?’

The most beautiful, mystical verse of the Quran. I knew it from my mother, but I could not say it, because I feared that then he would not teach it. My teacher spoke softly, but we all heard him perfectly, and this was my introduction to the sacred labour of the next five years.

It is obviously a duty not only to control one’s actions, but also one’s thoughts. Our minds are a part of the world as much as our deeds, and we cannot let them run wild. But I did permit myself to dwell on some features of my teacher himself: his hair was black and thick, his white robe perfectly pressed, his hands as he moved them strong and fine. These thoughts, I knew, were not proper, but it was hard not to feel that they were entirely right, because my teacher was a vessel, and the vessel takes on something of what it carries.    

Yes, as you have rightly guessed, looking back on it all, I had acquired feelings for my teacher. They grew stronger as the years passed. Now, two years after the triumphal ceremony in which I displayed my Quranic knowledge to family and friends, two years after returning to school, I still see him on the street sometimes. I go over and greet him respectfully, and when he smiles, calls me his best student and asks after my family, my heart is a boiling vat of happiness and pain. (‘This could get messy,’ according to a soulful singer whose music I once heard in a shopping mall.)

How can I marry one man when another one makes me feel like this? If – to use terms you might prefer – x is merely an unknown quantity but y produces tremendous feelings in me, feelings that I suspect may even be eternal (why, after bodily death, would a soul lose its love? isn’t love at the centre of a soul?), then surely I cannot choose x. But y is a religious teacher, and a man who is himself married! (I have not mentioned this. I do not like to think of it.) For me he must be unthinkable. And yet the thoughts creep in. If I were to confess my feelings to my teacher of the Quran, surely he would understand their purity and sincerity. Surely he would – well. I do not know exactly what I would be asking from him. But I know where he teaches, of course. I could go over one afternoon and explain myself to him, if you think it is a good idea.

I approached you because of course I cannot talk to my mother or Mrs Baderoon about this, and because philosophers are wise. Please, Dr Schiff: please speak.

Agitated regards,

Ilhaam

 

Thurs, Sept 24, 8:00 PM
Re: More questions than answers

Dear Ilhaam,

Thank you for your open and engaging message. It seems to me, though, that your remarks about the challenges you are facing might better be offered to someone in your life, perhaps a counsellor in your community.

Best wishes,

Gary Schiff

 

Thurs, Sept 24, 8:41PM
Re: More questions than answers

Dear Dr Schiff,

I can take a hint. I am sure you are busy, and unable to enlighten a girl who seeks direction in life. I will not contact you again.

With the exception of this question: what is the point of the old novels I have read, of large sections of the public library, of Jane Austen and the rest of them, if all they do is bring torment? Are the passions of nineteenth century Englishwomen not suitable for me?

But I suppose those books were in the fiction section for a reason.

Goodbye,

Ilhaam

 

Fri, Sept 25, 2:17 AM
Re: More questions than answers

You have the right idea: stick to the mathematics, communicate with God in abstract and blissful symbols, and you will not be unsettled by human foolishness. Dr Schiff, you are a wise man; it is now more obvious to me than ever.

Forlorn algebraic farewells,

Ilhaam

 

Mon, Sept 28, 5:20PM
Subject: Confession

I am ashamed of myself, Dr Schiff. Unreservedly, I apologise – it is deeply wrong behaviour from any perspective. You could probably prove its wrongness mathematically, so clear is it.

What I did was – and this confession cannot even begin to make amends – was to ask my aunt Laylaa to take me out early yesterday morning, Sunday. In the car, I explained that I did not wish to go for a walk after all, as I had told her on the phone, but rather to the airport in order to see a group of pilgrims departing for Mecca. She is such a kind woman, and used to my eccentricities, and so off we went. It does not take long from Rondebosch East to the airport, and all the while, past the sad shacks on the highway, my mind was cold and efficient. I thought: it is Departures, because he wishes to see her one more time, and it is probably International, because the drama of his message demands it. We arrived, and after ten minutes of waiting (my aunt: ‘Where is the group of pilgrims, darling girl? Have you not got it wrong?’) I was rewarded: a bearded man (I recognised you instantly) came darting from the entrance of the building towards the departures board, scanned it rapidly and then hurried towards a distant aisle.

I followed, my aunt sweetly quacking behind me. When I got to the Lufthansa section, I saw you talking to a red-haired woman in the middle of the queue. Well, really talking at her: she was facing resolutely forward, one large suitcase on either side of her, looking pale and anxious. One hand gripping each suitcase. (I checked her for nail polish: none.) I sidled slowly up, but my aunt was by now gripping my arm, demanding an explanation, and you in your turn were being eyed by a security guard, who was slowly moving towards you, so I turned and left. My aunt and I even received a few stares. Usually we get a couple of wary glances anyway, because of the niqaab – only our eyes are visible when we go out in public – but this time, my aunt’s agitation showed even through the black robe, and it took me several minutes to calm her with soothing falsehoods.

I wanted to see another kind of love enacted. I wanted to see how you really feel about things. I understand that you might be alarmed that this girl ninja followed you. I will never do it again, I promise. You were wearing a wedding ring, tight around your finger, but I know that the woman you were saying goodbye to – indeed, she did not even wish to offer you the chance to do so – was not your wife. I was sure she was not your wife when I saw her face and how she turned away, her finger ringless. I wonder whether your wife knows, and how you felt when you returned from the airport to her, whether you will now be content with a ‘commitment’ love.

But I must thank you, because I have indeed learnt something from you. If even the philosopher is approached by a concerned security guard, then this is a world in which we must all find our own way.   

The man journeying to me in a month’s time has made his own choice, whether he knows it or not, and when I see him I shall make mine.

Ayat An-Nur, the Verse of Light:

His light is a niche, and in it a lamp;

the lamp enclosed in glass; the glass a brilliant star,

lit from a blessed olive tree,

neither of east nor west.

We do not make our own light, it is all His, but we cannot be content merely to absorb it: we must choose for ourselves how we reflect it.

Illuminations,

Ilhaam

P.S. Here, at least, is something that might please you. I have spoken about you to my religious teacher, who is interested to hear of your interest in divinity and mathematics (I know you must be well-versed in such things), and will be happy for you to speak to his religious studies class. I shall send you details of the date and time. I too will be present at the talk, of course, as the link between him and you. And perhaps the three of us can have tea afterwards to continue our discussion of mathematics and related lofty matters.

 

 

GREG LAZARUS is the pen name of husband-and-wife writing duo Greg Fried and Lisa Lazarus. Lisa is a psychologist and freelance writer.

She has Masters degrees in educational psychology and creative writing, G LAZAR and a higher diploma in education. She has written for publications including Men’s Health, Femina, Shape, Cosmopolitan, Cape Town’s Child, O: GRE Psychologies, and Mail & Guardian. Lisa tutors Magazine Journalism, Feature Writing and Memoir Writing for SA Writer’s College. Greg is a philosopher at the University of Cape Town, where he teaches various topics, OR BIH including the history of philosophy and the philosophy of mathematics.

Currently his research is in social choice theory (which deals with methods A of reaching collective decisions) and in connections between mathematics and theology. The couple have written two novels, Paradise and When in Broad Daylight I Open My Eyes, as well as a memoir, The Book of Jacob: A Journey into Parenthood. Their short stories have appeared in various anthologies.

“The incongruity theory of humour,” write the duo, “says that situations involving the unexpected, the odd, unusual or out of place are funny. Clearly that’s not always true: when the two of us first watched Ghostbusters, we definitely didn’t laugh when that monster loomed out of the mist in Sigourney Weaver’s fridge. But it can be entertaining to watch incongruous things rub up against each other, and South Africa provides plenty of examples.”

Of This Could Get Messy, they write, “A pompous and staid philosopher of mathematics comes into contact with a passionate and intelligent schoolgirl. We enjoyed finding out what happens when this oddly-matched pair interact.” Greg adds: “Please note, my philosophical colleagues and I are entirely professional, and do not at all resemble the characters in the story!”

Follow their news at greglazarus.wordpress.com