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Maggie Messitt

    Maggie Messitt is an independent narrative journalist who has spent the last decade reporting from within underserved communities in southern Africa and Midwestern America. Her work is deeply invested in rural regions, social justice, and environmental sustainability, typically exploring complex issues through the lens of everyday life. Messitt's writing is characterized by its deep engagement with the communities she portrays, offering an inside perspective. Currently completing a PhD in creative nonfiction, her work blends investigative elements with memoir.

    Newspaper
    The Rainy Season: Three Lives in the New South Africa
    • 2024

      Object Lessons is a series of short, beautifully designed books about the hidden lives of ordinary things. Newspaper is about more than news printed on paper. It brings us inside our best and worst selves, from censorship and the intentional destruction of historic record, to partisan and white supremacist campaigns, to the story of an instrument that has been central to democracy and to holding the powerful to account. Newspapers are significant and vital and yet also quotidian and disposable: stuffed inside walls for insulation, crumpled to wash windows or start fires, and spread across floors to protect from paint or muddy shoes. A part of our daily ritual, “the first draft of history,” and a critical component of our democracy, newspapers figure in our lives and societies in many different ways, but are often central to the communities they serve. This is a 400-year history of a nearly-endangered object and journalist Maggie Messitt's more recent, personal journey as an advocate for its transformation and survival in the two democratic nations she calls home – the United States and South Africa. A collection of 100 vignettes, Newspaper is a reflection on the past and present, and a journey alongside those seeking to prevent its extinction. Object Lessons is published in partnership with an essay series in The Atlantic.

      Newspaper
    • 2015

      The Rainy Season, a work of engaging literary journalism, introduces readers to the remote bushveld community of Rooiboklaagte and opens a window into the complicated reality of daily life in South Africa. It tells the stories of three generations in the Rainbow Nation one decade after its first democratic elections. This multi-threaded narrative follows Regina, a tapestry weaver in her sixties, standing at the crossroads where her Catholic faith and the AIDS pandemic crash; Thoko, a middle-aged sangoma (traditional healer) taking steps to turn her shebeen into a fully licensed tavern; and Dankie, a young man taking his matriculation exams, coming of age as one of Mandela's Children, the first academic class educated entirely under democratic governance.

      The Rainy Season: Three Lives in the New South Africa