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Review: The Rowing lesson

April 24, 2008 23:00

ByLawrence Joffe, Lawrence Joffe

2 min read

By Anne Landsman
Granta, £12

Summoned back to Cape Town from bohemian New York, Betsy Klein finds herself tending to a once irrepressible father now lying in a coma. For days, she lingers around the sterile corridors of Groote Schuur Hospital with her mother, brother and sundry nurses and doctors, all hoping against hope for Harold Klein to awake.

But the past is where the book is really located as Betsy, pregnant with her first child, recalls incidents from her loving yet anguished relationship with her father.

Audaciously, she imagines the world through his eyes, growing up the son of a poor Jewish shopkeeper in the rural platteland, feeling alienated from local Afrikaners and mixed-race Coloureds, yet conflicted about his own father Joseph’s Lithuanian roots. Some passages are memorable — on the train journey where the young Harold embarks on his idealistic escape from rural claustrophobia to become a doctor, he witnesses “the Langeberge [mountains] washed by the cool moon, giant soldiers bent over in sleep.