News & Reviews
      
          Karin Brynard kom na Penguin    
           
    
  
   
    
          05 July 2013  
  
          Met die voltrekking van ‘n betekenisvolle boeketransaksie word vandag bekend gemaak dat Penguin Books (Suid-Afrika) in ’n veiling die publikasieregte in vier romans deur die opkomende ster-skrywer Karin Brynard bekom het.
	 
	Die bekroonde Stellenbosse skrywer en joernalis het twee romans op haar kerfstok, Plaasmoord (Human...  
  
    
      
          Karin Brynard comes to Penguin    
           
    
  
   
    
          04 July 2013  
  
          Marking a significant book deal it is announced today that Penguin Books (South Africa) has won at auction the publishing rights in four novels by rising star Karin Brynard.
	 
	The award-winning Stellenbosch author and journalist has two novels to her credit, Plaasmoord (Human & Rousseau, 2009) and Onse vaders (Human & Rousseau...  
  
    
      
          Do You Remember ... ?    
           
    
  
   
    
          25 June 2013  
  
          Trevor Romain’s book Random Kak I remember about growing up in South Africa made me smile, made me laugh and made me a little heartsore for the youth that so quickly passed me by.
Zapiro’s quote on the front cover pretty much sums it up: “Vividly evocative of the sights and sounds of the old South Africa, with a hint of...  
  
    
      
          Joan Campbell Reviews Never Let Go    
           
    
  
   
    
          19 June 2013  
  
          For somebody who generally takes two or three weeks to read a book, my recent three-day book sprint is rather remarkable. The last time I read anything so quickly was probably as a student procrastinating from studying. Never Let Go wasn’t even a book I would normally have picked up at the library or bookstore. I tend to stay away...  
  
    
      
          The Biography of One of South Africa’s Most Infamous Characters - Glenn Agliotti    
           
    
  
     
    
          11 June 2013  
  
          A magistrate put Glenn Agliotti among the ‘snitches, pimps, rats who would sell their soul to evade a long prison term’. The press called him a drug trafficker and a drug dealer. He was. He’d admitted to these crimes and signed a plea bargain to grass on an associate. He was also known as the Landlord, which made him sound like a...  
  
    





