Mark Behr (deceased)
Gender: Male
Sexuality: Gay
DOB: 19 October 1963
RIP: 27 November 2015
Ethnicity: Afrikaner
Occupation: Writer, professor, veteran
seen from Russia
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from China
seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Thailand
seen from Thailand

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Ukraine
seen from Brazil
seen from Türkiye
seen from Croatia

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
Mark Behr (deceased)
Gender: Male
Sexuality: Gay
DOB: 19 October 1963
RIP: 27 November 2015
Ethnicity: Afrikaner
Occupation: Writer, professor, veteran
Mark Behr was a Tanzanian-born author who grew up in South Africa.
Mark Behr was born 19 October 1963 and died 27 November 2015.
Quotes
At heart it [Kings of the Water] is a book about the fluidity of life and the inevitability of change – personal, political, psychological, environmental, discursive – and the foolishness (and danger) of all kinds of certitude and of trying to control what cannot be controlled. (via)
I merely tip my hat—perhaps in gratitude alone—to these who have offered an axe with which to chop at the frozen sea inside of me. As with friends and certain lovers, I have no idea what my life might resemble if I had not been privileged to spend time in their company. (via)
How loudly will writers demand to speak truth to power and whose words and stories will this time be co-opted, discredited or disallowed? The wind is already being sown to reap a new whirlwind of words. (via)
Mark Behr was a Tanzanian-born author who grew up in South Africa. He wrote novels, short stories, and essays. He was professor of English Literature and Creative Writing at Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee. He also taught in the MA program at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, His three novels are The Smell of Apples (which was nominated for the Booker Prize), Embrace, and Kings of the Water. His work dealt with themes of violence, racism, nationalism, militarisation, masculinity, and colonialism.
dans ma tête résonne quelque chose comme le bruit de la mer, avec des oiseaux qui battent des ailes...
L'Odeur des pommes s'ouvre comme l'histoire sage, couleur sépia, d'un petit garçon de 10 ans. Nous sommes au début des années 1970. Marnus vit au Cap, dans une belle maison patricienne qui surplombe False Bay. Il a une soeur aînée, Ilse, et un super-copain d'école, Frikkie. Le petit Marnus vit dans la vénération de ses parents : sa mère, une ex-contralto, élégante et sévère ; et surtout son père, militaire de haut rang, figure de l'autorité, bel homme et amateur de pêche. Elle et lui aiment appeler leur fils "mon petit négrillon". Il n'y trouve rien à redire. C'est un clin d'oeil, un mot tendre. Les vrais "négrillons" ne sont que des ébauches humaines... "De toutes les nations du monde, celles qui ont la peau noire sur le cul ont aussi les plus petits cerveaux", ânonne tranquillement le fils du général.Contaminé dès le berceau par l'idéologie raciste de sa famille afrikaner - idéologie qui était la norme, alors, en Afrique du Sud, comme en Rhodésie (rebaptisée Zimbabwe) et ailleurs -, le héros de L'Odeur des pommes ne s'en défend pas. Il finit par endosser les monstruosités des adultes, il s'en fait le complice muet. Plus tard, fidèle au père, il endossera (littéralement) l'uniforme militaire et partira combattre en Angola la "vermine" communiste.
Une réflexion sur l'innocence
Peinture subtile de l'emprise mortifère d'un ordre - le système d'apartheid, aboli en 1991 -, ce premier roman de Mark Behr, d'abord publié en afrikaans, en 1993, jette un regard à la fois très fin et très critique sur les contradictions de la société blanche sud-africaine. Et sur les liens du régime de Pretoria avec le Chili du général Pinochet - L'Odeur des pommes se situe en 1973, au lendemain de la chute du gouvernement Allende. C'est aussi une réflexion, troublante, sur l'innocence.
Mark Behr, L'Odeur des pommes, traduit de l'anglais (Afrique du Sud) par Pierre Guglielmina. Jean-Claude Lattès, 300 p. & en poche: J’ai Lu 10351
Catherine Simon, article paru dans Le Monde des Livres
I begin to understand the true meaning of the embrace. We embrace to be embraced. We embrace our children to be folded into the arms of the future, to pass ourselves on beyond death, to be transported. That is how it was when I embraced you, always.
Mark Behr - The Embrace
So, I got my college's magazine in the mail today, and I was very excited to see that the very difficult Creative Writing professor that I am taking a class from next semester was featured in an article on his favorite books! Yep... as if my list wasn't already long enough, it's definitely time to read all of these before August! I am so excited about this class, and this professor seems absolutely fantastic. I just think it'd be a really good idea to try to read and understand the writing that he loves - gives you more things to talk about, a greater understanding of phenomenal writing, and most of all, some fantastic books to read.