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Niq Mhlongo
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Niq Mhlongo (born 1973)[1] is a South African journalist, editor, writer and educator.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Mhlongo was born in Midway-Chiawelo, Soweto, the seventh of nine children, and raised in Soweto. His father, who died when Mhlongo was a teenager, worked as a post-office sweeper. Mhlongo was sent to Limpopo Province, the province his mother came from, to finish high school. Initially failing his matriculation exam in October 1990,[2] Mhlongo completed his matric at Malenga High School in 1991.

He studied African literature and political studies at the University of the Witwatersrand, gaining a BA in 1996. In 1997, he enrolled to study law there, transferring to the University of Cape Town the following year. In 2000, he discontinued university study to write his first novel, Dog Eat Dog.[3]

Writing

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Mhlongo was described by Rachel Donadio in The New York Times as "one of the most high-spirited and irreverent new voices of South Africa's post-apartheid literary scene".[2]

Mhlongo has presented his work at the Caine Prize Workshop and the Zanzibar International Film Festival, and was a 2008 International Writing Program fellow at the University of Iowa.[4] His work has been translated into Spanish, German, French, Dutch and Italian.

Mhlongo's writing has a post-apartheid backdrop. He is influenced by his hometown of Soweto; he pens his novels in Soweto, about Soweto and in Soweto dialect. His book Way Back Home was launched in Soweto. Xenophobia is another theme explored in Mhlongo's work.[5]

Publications

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  • Dog Eat Dog (Kwela, 2004)
  • After Tears (Kwela, 2007)
  • Way Back Home (Kwela, 2013)
  • Affluenza (Kwela, 2016)
  • Soweto, Under The Apricot Tree (Kwela, 2018)
  • Black Tax (Jonathan Ball, 2019)
  • Paradise in Gaza (Kwela, 2020)
  • Joburg Noir (Jacana, 2020)
  • Hauntings (Jacana, 2021)
  • For You, I'd Steal a Goat (Kwela, 2022)
  • The City is Mine (Kwela, 2024)

Awards

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References

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