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Sarah LeFanu

    This author delves into the intricacies of human motivation and complex societal issues, crafting narratives that are both compelling and insightful. Her work often explores the position of women and expands gender perspectives, offering readers fresh ways to consider the world. With a keen eye for detail and psychological depth, she develops characters and stories that resonate long after the final page. Her approach to literature is both analytical and accessible, making her a distinctive voice in contemporary writing.

    Something of Themselves
    Dreaming of Rose
    S is for Samora
    • S is for Samora

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading
      4.3(17)Add rating

      Samora Machel led FRELIMO, the Mozambican Liberation Front, to victory against Portuguese colonialism in 1974, and the following year became independent Mozambique's first President. This biography presents the many different faces of the man Nelson Mandela called 'a true African revolutionary'.

      S is for Samora
    • In 2003 the former Women's Press editor and critic Sarah LeFanu published her acclaimed biography of Rose Macaulay with Virago Press. Dreaming of Rose is a memoir of a woman juggling the demands of teaching, research and writing while patching together a living.

      Dreaming of Rose
    • Something of Themselves

      • 352 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      In early 1900, the paths of three British writers--Rudyard Kipling, Mary Kingsley and Arthur Conan Doyle--crossed in South Africa, during what's become known as Britain's last imperial war. Each of the three had pressing personal reasons to leave England behind, but they were also motivated by notions of duty, service, patriotism and, in Kipling's case, jingoism.Sarah LeFanu compellingly opens an unexplored chapter of these writers' lives, at a turning point for Britain and its imperial ambitions. Was the South African War, as Kipling claimed, a dress rehearsal for the Armageddon of World War One? Or did it instead foreshadow the anti-colonial guerrilla wars of the later twentieth century?Weaving a rich and varied narrative, LeFanu charts the writers' paths in the theatre of war, and explores how this crucial period shaped their cultural legacies, their shifting reputations, and their influence on colonial policy.

      Something of Themselves