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Book details
  • Genre:FICTION
  • SubGenre:Historical / General
  • Language:English
  • Pages:296
  • eBook ISBN:9781543900712

Kites of Good Fortune

by Therese Benadé

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview

Set in multi-ethnic Cape Town in the heyday of the Dutch East India Company, this well-researched historical novel explores the life of Anna de Koningh, the daughter of Angela of Bengal, a slave who was freed at the Cape. Anna's marriage to the Swedish officer, Olof Bergh, forms the core of the novel. It illuminates many corners of Cape society and culture, and what Anna's life meant to her and others.

Description

The book is solidly based on archival and museum research. The principal characters, Olof Bergh and Anna de Koningh, are historical personages on whom documents exist in the Cape Archives and in published archival sources. The chief male character, Olof Bergh, was a Dutch East India Company employee whose career can be followed archivally in some detail. His story provides an armature on which the story of Anna de Koningh can be created. Unsurprisingly, there is much less in the documents about her. It is a truth universally acknowledged that women’s lives are less fully recorded archivally than men’s. (Hence the novelist). But there are documentary flashes, as when she fishes Willem Adriaen van der Stel’s wife out of a dam: that comes from Adam Tas’s Diary. Unlike many historical novelists, the author has chosen not to use the easy device of an invented peripheral character as narrator, who witnesses the action and serves up a running commentary on it. She has chosen Anna de Koningh herself as her narrator. This was a bold decision, but it works and works well. Indeed she has no invented characters at all; they are all historical personages [except for one musician]. The inner life of Anna de Koningh had to be invented, and the author has done that very effectively, in such a way that the reader is involved and interested. Whether the historical Anna de Koningh had any of the qualities and skills with which the novelist has endowed her is something the historian will never be able to tell us. But for an hour or two she will live for the reader in a way that makes her time more accessible.

About the author
Therese Benadé is an eleventh-generation descendant of Anna de Koningh. Her story is based on extensive primary source research including records of inventories and estate sales at the Cape Archives, the Resolutions of the Council of Policy at the Cape of Good Hope and journals of travelers and botanists. Therese left South Africa in 1968 and has lived in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), England, Canada, Brazil, Pakistan and Indonesia. She currently lives in the US. Visit Therese at www.theresebenade.com