Author Archives: Vivien Horler

The power of a tiny hare to transform a life

Review: Vivien Horler

Raising Hare – The heartwarming true story of an unlikely friendship, by Chloe Dalton (Canongate)

On a bitter winter day, Chloe Dalton left her converted barn home for a walk in the English countryside. It was during Covid and she, a busy, foreign policy political adviser based in London, had been grounded.

Walking down the lane, she spotted something on the middelmannetjie. “Set against the bare earth and dry grass it was hard to tell where its fur ended and the ground began. It blended into the dead winter landscape so completely that, but for the rapid rise and fall of its flanks, I would have mistaken it for a stone.”

It was a leveret, a baby hare, no longer than the width of Dalton’s palm, lying on its stomach with its eyes open and its short ears flattened against its back. Continue reading

Bedside Table for February 2026

These are among the books that landed on my desk in February – interestingly, two are South African autobiographies, while the first is an updated version of an old favourite. Some of the books mentioned here will be reviewed in full later. – Vivien Horler

Lundy’s Best Walks in the Cape Peninsula, by Mike Lundy, revised by Tim Lundy (Struik)

Mike Lundy’s Best Walks in the Cape Peninsula was first published in 1991, with its eighth edition published in 2012. Not too long after that Lundy died, and now his son Tim has decided to update the guide to ensure no-one gets lost following outdated instructions.

In his preface Lundy jun writes he began hiking with his father almost 45 years ago, and now guides visitors and locals along Cape Town’s many mountain trails for a living.

“I couldn’t ask for a better job than being outdoors almost every day, getting exercise and being reminded of the many stories my father would tell during our hikes.”

In this new edition, Lundy sen remains the narrator, chatting about historical sites, plants, trees and birds en route. But all route descriptions and maps have been brought up to date, and there are now fabulous colour pictures by Luke Moore.

To revise the book, Lundy jun walked all 26 routes described in the earlier editions over the course of a year, reliving some of the experiences shared with his father. There were a few he had never walked before, he says, adding: “There are always new trails to discover.”

This guide also contains four new trails, replacing routes now considered “ill-advised”. They are the Devil’s Contour, the Reservoir Route, Chapman’s Peak Contour and the Devil’s Circular Trail.

The guide lists trails starting from Kloof Nek, from Camps Bay, from Hout Bay, the South Peninsula, Kalk Bay and Muizenberg, from Tokai and Constantia, and from Kirstenbosch and Newlands.

Each trail is graded for difficulty, gives the likely time to be taken, advises whether there is water available, and if dogs are welcome.

There is also an introductory section on safety tips, the weather, the geology of the mountain chain, and peninsula plants you’re likely to see, along with birds and, possibly, snakes.

As with the previous editions, this is a slim guide that will fit into a backpack without adding much weight.

Getting Back on the Bike, a journey of grit, grace and rising up again, by Cathy Carstens (Yes! Press)

Cathy Carstens is the only woman to have won five consecutive Argus Cycle Tours, between 1986 and 1990. Then she had a family, concentrated on her physiotherapy practice, and stopped competitive riding.

Until February 2002, that is, when she had a call from Pat White, race administrator of the Argus (now the Cape Town Cycle Tour). To mark the 25th anniversary of the Argus that year, White told Carstens, they had made commemorative jerseys for all the previous winners. And they wanted Carstens – and the others – to collect their jerseys at the start of the race.

Carstens thought about it, figuring if she was going to be up at 6.30am to collect the jersey, she might as well ride the race.

And she did, with no real training. Carstens seems to be one tough lady, who overcame several surgeries on a dodgy knee to become one of SA’s top cyclists.

Anchors Down in Africa: Into exile from communist Poland – a maverick shipbuilder’s journey, by Zbyszek Miszczak (Southern Right Publishers)

In the early 1980s, engineer and Gdansk shipbuilder Zbyszek Miszczak (wish he had told us how to pronounce his name) fled communist Poland with his wife and small child, the wife’s twin sister, her husband and their small child.

All highly educated, they wanted a brighter, freer future, and had managed to leave Poland before martial law was declared in 1981, closing the borders. After a stint in as refugees in Austria, the SA Defence force helped them emigrate to SA, where they achieved permanent residence and finally citizenship.

Mliszczak was employed in the SA Navy’s Simon’s Town dockyard for 17 years.

This book is the surprisingly readable account of Miszczak’s life, from the old days in Poland living in a tiny flat with his parents, his education and compulsory state service, as well as his decision to leave the country before he was called up for military service.

Driving down to Cape Town from Pretoria for the first time, the family stopped at the top of Du Toitskloof Pass to look at the view. Miszczak gazed at Table Mountain in the distance, covered in its tablecloth, with Devil’s Peak just poking through the cloud. To the west was the Atlantic Ocean, sparkling in the sun. Below them were lush green vineyards dotted with little dams. “I will never forget this first impression I had of Cape Town. Scenic beauty beyond anyone’s imagination.”

He told himself: “You can relax now, buddy, the journey is over. Anchors down!”

Digging Deep – A history of mining in South Africa, by Jade Davenport (Jonathan Ball)

The first edition of Digging Deep was published in 2013; this is the second, revised and updated.

I have been interested in mining ever since doing some research into the life of my great-grandfather, a hard-rock miner who came to South Africa around 1890 from the Isle of Man (where he was a lead miner) via Cornwall (tin) and Colorado (silver) to Johannesburg (gold). His decision to come here is why most of our family still live here.

In her introduction, author and mining commentator Jade Davenport says this book does not profess to be a comprehensive history of the industry, although a quick scan of the index shows it to be pretty wide-ranging.

She felt the second edition was needed, she says in the preface to the new edition, because since 2013 “the mining industry has gone through a profound and, in many ways, deeply distressing evolution.

It has seen structural decline, “reflecting the fundamental challenges associated with ageing assets, rising operational costs, unreliable electricity supply, logistical bottlenecks in rail and port infrastructure, a chronic lack of exploration investment, and periods of labour unrest”.

She says these challenges have been compounded by the policy direction and regulatory uncertainty under the ANC government.

The new edition includes two chapters that cover the post-apartheid transformation of the industry, and concludes with the appointment of Gwede Mantashe as Minister of Mineral resources in 2018. Say no more.

The tale is disillusioning in many ways, she writes, but essential, “for what is the purpose of history if not to confront uncomfortable truths, learn from past experiences, and provide a foundation upon which to build a resilient future?”

 

Heart-breaking story of age and love – and a dog called Sixten

Review: Vivien Horler

When the Cranes Fly South, by Lisa Ridzen, translated by Alice Menzies (Doubleday)R

I have just finished this novel and I am in tears. It’s a dog book, and I am a dog person. It gets to you.

I bought it for my book club after a member said she couldn’t make it to our monthly meeting as she was moving her 90-something mum to frail care. She added: “I’m already emotionally exhausted having rehomed her cat today.”

So in Wordsworth Books a few days later my eye was drawn to a cover with a line-drawing of a dog, and a hand rubbing his ears. The blurb on the back says elderly Bo lives a quiet life in a village in northern Sweden, with his days punctuated by visits from his care team and his son Hans. He also has his beloved elkhound, Sixten, for company.

But now Hans feels Bo should give the dog up. He is too big for Bo to cope with on walks, and besides, Sixten needs more exercise than Bo can provide. Continue reading

An act of appalling violence leads to a story of love

Review: Vivien Horler

Knife – Meditations after an attempted murder, by Salman Rushdie (Vintage)

Salman Rushdie’s fourth novel, The Satanic Verses, was published in 1988 when he was 41 years old. It was highly regarded, being a finalist for the 1988 Booker Prize, and winning the 1988 Whitbread Award for novel of the year.

But Shia Muslims regarded it as blasphemous, and in 1989 Iran’s leader, the Ayatollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa calling for Rushdie to be killed. The government of Britain’s Margaret Thatcher provided Pakistan-born Rushdie, who was living in the UK at the time, with 24-hour police protection. He went into hiding for years.

The novel prompted riots and protests, and in some cases people were killed. The Japanese man who translated the novel into Japanese was stabbed to death in 1991. Continue reading

Mutual loneliness and a power imbalance ratchets up the tension in this haunting novel

Review: Vivien Horler

Cape Fever, by Nadia Davids (Scribner)

The brooding tension that permeates this novel about the relationship between a madam and her servant builds until you start to wonder: “Will she kill her? Don’t kill her!”

Which is a long way from the beginning.

It is 1920, just two years after the end of World War I. Mrs Hattingh, a widow, lives in a street of houses meant “for doctors and ambassadors”. Her son, Mr Timothy, was wounded in the war, but is now practising as a lawyer in London. Mrs Hattingh is lonely.

She needs a cleaner/cook, which tells Soraya Matas, visiting from the Quarter for a job interview, that Mrs Hattingh is not as wealthy as her house suggests. The dark patches on the wallpaper indicate paintings that once hung here have been sold. Continue reading

How a fight against SA’s wine bureaucracy led to wines fit for a queen

Review: Vivien Horler

Red Tape: The untold story of a visionary South African’s battle against bureaucracy, and the birth of a world-renowned wine region, by Brigid Hamilton Russell (Quickfox)

An international trade treaty with the unlikely name of the Crayfish Agreement was at the heart of legendary wine man Tim Hamilton Russell’s victory over bureaucracy.

The agreement was signed in Paris between the Union of South Africa and the French Republic on February 11, 1935, granting SA the right to export crayfish to France at favourable tariffs, as well as fresh and dried fruit.

In exchange, the Union government agreed SA wine and brandy makers would be barred from using any “appellations of French origin”. So not only could the local industry not call a locally produced wine a Bordeaux or Burgundy, it could not even describe it as made in the Bordeaux or Burgundy style, type or class. Continue reading

A literary quest, a treasure hunt, a love story and a dystopian future – what’s not to love?

Review: Vivien Horler

What We Can Know, by Ian McEwan (Jonathan Cape)

Central to this brilliant novel is a dinner party and a poem no one but the poet’s wife has read.

This sounds rather genteel, but What We Can Know is a great deal more than that – it’s the tale of a literary quest complete with buried treasure, a love story, a terrible crime, a harrowing description of caring for a partner with dementia, and a meditation on the difficulties presented by historical biography.

It’s also a fascinating exploration of what our world could become, with about two-thirds of the narrative set in 2119, a bit over a century hence. There has been the Inundation, the flooding much of the world, leaving the republic of Britain an archipelago of islands. There have been limited nuclear wars, and the major superpower appears to be Nigeria. GPS no longer exists, as satellites reach obsolescence and crash and burn, and it’s not clear how long the internet will survive. About half the world’s population has died. Continue reading

Rollercoaster of love, abuse and obsession – with a glimpse of hope

Review: Vivien Horler

All the Way to the River – Love, loss and liberation, by Elizabeth Gilbert (Bloomsbury Publishing)

All the Way to the River is the third memoir of Elizabeth Gilbert’s I’ve read. The first was Eat Pray Love, a bestseller which made her fortune. It famously starred Julia Roberts in the film version.

The second was Committed – A love story, and was a sequel to the first. At the end of Eat Pray Love Gilbert meets a Brazilian, and the pair agree to a committed relationship, but not to marry, since both have been divorced and don’t want to go through that again. But the US government steps in, saying if they don’t marry, the Brazilian will not be allowed to return to the US. And so they do.

All the Way to the River is another love story, of sorts. It’s also about addiction, and beating it – or not.

This time the object of Gilbert’s devotion is Rayya Elias, a Syrian-born hairdresser, musician, filmmaker and force of nature. Continue reading

Account of stonking map blunders makes a flipping great read

Review: Vivien Horler

This Way Up – When maps go wrong (and why it matters) by Mark Cooper-Jones & Jay Foreman (Mudlark)

Back when I was at school we learnt in History, or it may have been Geography, that Bartholomeu Dias and his flotilla were the first Europeans to round the Cape of Good Hope in 1488, opening up the sea route to India and the east.

But there’s an extraordinary tale of skulduggery involving Christopher Columbus, and how a map by his cartographer brother Bartholomew Colmbus probably persuaded the Spanish royal court to fund Christopher’s voyage west across the Atlantic to find India, China and the Spice Islands. (He didn’t of course – but he did find the West Indies.)

It appears, according to this fascinating book by a pair of chaps who call themselves the Map Men (after their YouTube video series), that Italian-born Columbus, with his brother in tow, first approached the Portuguese court with his plan.

But Portugal turned them down, partly on the grounds that the trip was counter to Portugal’s determination to find a route to India by rounding Africa and sailing east.

Columbus went on to see if he could persuade the Spanish to sponsor him, but he left his brother behind in Portugal compiling a new world map for the king, based on the latest Portuguese discoveries.

Dias’s triumphant return to Portugual in 1488 appeared to scupper Columbus’s Spanish plans, and Portugal was keeping the details of Dias’s voyage secret. Columbus was desperate – and broke.

His secret weapon was the useful Portuguese information provided by his brother, via another Italian cartographer called Martellus.  The Map Men tell us Martellus’s map had Columbus’s brother’s fingerprints “all over it”.

The extraordinary thing about this map is that the southern tip of Africa is ridiculously long, so much so that it breaks the map’s frame.

The Map Men write: “Discoverer Dias had marked the Cape of Good Hope at 34 degrees south of the equator, which just happened to be bang on; A+ for his use of the astrolabe. On Martellus’s map, however, it’s an inexplicable 45 degrees south.”

Notes that Bartholomew Columbus left behind after his death said he was present when Dias presented his findings to King John II of Portugal, claiming the Cape was 45 degrees south.

“Columbus’s Brother was present in all of this, and therefore would have known Dias located the Cape at 34 degrees, not 45. What he writes here, therefore, is a blatant lie. At 45 degrees the journey east to Asia was made a whole 40 degrees less appealing… One degree of latitude equates to 69 miles, so by adding a total of 40 degrees of sailing, Columbus’s Brother had made the eastern route to Asia less appealing by about 2 760 miles.”

And the Map Men conclude: “Not only do the inexplicable [map] distortions appear perfectly designed to facilitate Columbus’s ambitions, they contain a body of evidence quite literally pointing to the hand of his brother.”

As a result, the Spanish court of Ferdinand and Isabella gave Columbus the okay to head west in 1492. He returned, wrongly claiming to have been in Japan, when he was in fact in Cuba. The French Caribbean island of St Barts bears Columbus’s brother’s name to this day.

This is just one of the stories told in an extraordinary and fascinating account of the importance of maps.

I’ll mention two other intriguing snippets in This Way Up. Copyright is tricky when you’re a mapmaker, because if your map is correct, what’s to stop other cartographers from publishing their own versions, with slightly different colours or fonts, and without all the hard slog of actually measuring streets and rivers and mountains?

The solution is to introduce deliberate errors, a dead giveaway if you’re copying some else’s map. There’s a tiny alley in London called Book Mews, which appears in the London A-Z as “Brook Mews”. The Map Men say there is a rumour the A-Z has at least one mistake on every page.

And here’s another factoid: in February 2019, the same month the Swedish furniture company Ikea was about to open a branch in New Zealand, they produced a map of the world that left New Zealand off it altogether.

It turns out New Zealand is quite often left off world maps, including the massive United Nations logo on the wall of the UN headquarters in New York.

In Kazakhstan Airport there’s a large wall map of the world in the customs hall with no New Zealand… “which by the way resulted in a New Zealand visitor being detained for 24 hours when unable to point to the country of her passport in 2016”.

I enjoyed This Way Up very much, although occasionally the Map Men’s jokey tone jars, and the maps, reprinted in black and white to fit a trade paperback’s A5 pages, are often too small to be helpful. But I learnt a lot, in a most agreeable way.

 

 

 

 

The fascinated horror at a mushroom hunting mother on trial for murder

Review: Vivien Horler

The Mushroom Tapes – Conversations on a triple murder trial, by Helen Garner, Chloe Hooper and Sarah Krasnostein (Text Publishing)

Many books have been published within weeks of the end of a sensational court case, mostly it would seem to cash in on the public’s ghoulish interest in the subject matter.

The Mushroom Tapes is not one of those, although its subject captured headlines all around the world. There is something about  women killers that evoke a kind of fascinated horror: women are supposed to be caring and nurturing, not cold-hearted murderers.

There is still some interest in women like the SA nurse Daisy de Melker, who was accused of poisoning two husbands with strychnine and found guilty of murdering her son with arsenic. She was hanged in Pretoria Central Prison in 1932, aged 46.

Then there was Marlene Lehenberg who, with a co-accused, killed her lover’s wife in Cape Town in 1974, and was sentenced to death. The death sentence was later commuted.

And of course there was Dina Rodrigues, found guilty in 2007 of masterminding the killing of her lover’s baby by a previous girlfriend. She served a lengthy prison sentence.

The Mushroom Tapes is about what is probably Australia’s most notorious murder trial. It involved a wealthy but middle class woman called Erin Patterson who in 2023 murdered her parents-in-law, as well as her mother-in-law’s sister, by feeding them a lunch laced with death cap mushrooms. Continue reading