‘A huge, multi-layered novel’ Sunday Times
Embrace is the story of the awakening of Karl De Man a thirteen-year-old student at the Berg, an exclusive academy for boys in South Africa in the 1970s.
Karl grows up on a game reserve in East Africa, intensely aware of landscape and wildlife; he has a loving and close family, but a traditional one that will never easily accept Karl’s true self.
When he is sent away to school Karl makes new friendships. But, after threats and punishments handed out after casual sexual games in the dorm, Karl falls in love. He has secret affairs with his best friend, Dominic, who is the son of liberal parents, and his choirmaster, Jacques Cilliers.
The great strength of the novel is that it places Karl’s passions on a wider canvas, focusing on his raw passions and elemental drives against the landscapes of Africa. It is a staggering follow-up to Mark Behr’s award-winning first novel, The Smell of Apples.
Embrace is the story of the awakening of Karl De Man a thirteen-year-old student at the Berg, an exclusive academy for boys in South Africa in the 1970s.
Karl grows up on a game reserve in East Africa, intensely aware of landscape and wildlife; he has a loving and close family, but a traditional one that will never easily accept Karl’s true self.
When he is sent away to school Karl makes new friendships. But, after threats and punishments handed out after casual sexual games in the dorm, Karl falls in love. He has secret affairs with his best friend, Dominic, who is the son of liberal parents, and his choirmaster, Jacques Cilliers.
The great strength of the novel is that it places Karl’s passions on a wider canvas, focusing on his raw passions and elemental drives against the landscapes of Africa. It is a staggering follow-up to Mark Behr’s award-winning first novel, The Smell of Apples.
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Reviews
[Behr] is adept at varying his style to the mood and age of his protagonist, letting his key character speak for himself
Subtle, complex and compassionate ... Behr excels at exploring the grey areas of complicity and understanding, while larger rights and wrongs are playing themselves out on the horizon
A sensitive and subtle story
De Man's well drawn family, his original voice and his beautiful prose make this book very special, almost epic