THIS THING CALLED the FUTURE

THIS THING CALLED THE FUTURE  by J.L. Powers

Look for a full review in the Horn Book Magazine, July/August 2011

This magical novel looks closely at life in the contemporary shantytowns of modern South Africa.  Witches live there.  Romance happens there.  Young girls are prey for “sugar daddies” who promise the world but instead take innocence and often a girl’s future.  This rich novel by Jessica Powers weaves the story of Khosi Zulu growing up in poverty, AIDS, and the modern world in a very real setting where tribal wisdom and traditional healing conflict with modern ways and modern medicine.  Healing is found in many sources.  The language is rich with description of daily life, dialect and local phrases. Cultural issues of women’s rights in a society that is rapidly changing are woven throughout the book.   The main character, Khosi, finds her way through the confusion of magical powers and realistic dangers to claim for herself her own future.

Comments from the author, Jessica L. Powers:

There are a lot of reasons why I wrote this novel. I fell in love with African women a long time ago and I wanted to write about their experiences. But the impetus for the story came when one young thirteen-year-old told me she wasn’t allowed to go to church anymore because her grandmother had caught her kissing her boyfriend. It turned out her boyfriend was in his thirties. That’s when I learned that “sugar daddies’ are a big problem in South Africa–so big a problem that I saw articles about it in the gossip magazines on grocery store stands. Everything else about the book came together as I started thinking about the problem of older men preying on young girls, and what it would be like to be a girl with that problem. Also, I wrote the book because I obsess about certain topics and a topic I’ve been obsessing about for some years are these questions, “What does healing mean in different cultures? What does it mean to be a healer? Is there such a thing as supernatural healing/spiritual healing and how does that relate to physical healing? How does the healing of the body relate to the healing of the spirit/soul?” I’m still obsessing over those questions.

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