book cover of How to Be a Revolutionary
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How to Be a Revolutionary

(2022)
A novel by

 
 
Named one of ESSENCE's "9 South African Entertainers You Should Know"

An extraordinary, ambitious, globe-spanning novel about what we owe our consciences


Fleeing her moribund marriage in Cape Town, Beth accepts a diplomatic posting to Shanghai. In this anonymous city she hopes to lose herself in books, wine, and solitude, and to dodge whatever pangs of conscience she feels for her fealty to a South African regime that, by the 21st century, has betrayed its early promises.

At night, she hears the sound of typing, and then late one evening Zhao arrives at her door. They explore hidden Shanghai and discover a shared love of Langston Hughes--who had his own Chinese and African sojourns. But then Zhao vanishes, and a typewritten manuscript--chunk by chunk--appears at her doorstep instead. The truths unearthed in this manuscript cause her to reckon with her own past, and the long-buried story of what happened to Kay, her fearless, revolutionary friend...

Connecting contemporary Shanghai, late Apartheid-era South Africa, and China during the Great Leap Forward and the Tiananmen uprising--and refracting this globe-trotting and time-traveling through Hughes' confessional letters to a South African protege about the poet's time in Shanghai--How to Be a Revolutionary is an amazingly ambitious novel. It's also a heartbreaking exploration of what we owe our countries, our consciences, and ourselves.



Genre: Literary Fiction

Praise for this book

"How To Be A Revolutionary is that rare political thriller with an epic sweep. Deftly interweaving upheavals in three countries, C.A. Davids brilliantly dissects the ways we deceive ourselves and fail to live up to our highest ideals while still holding out hope that we can yet wake up and make atonements." - Nawaaz Ahmed

"C.A. Davids is one of South Africa's most innovative writers. In How to be a Revolutionary she has written a global novel which explores the hopes and disappointments of twentieth-century revolutions in a series of vivid portraits, one of which is a sensitively realised vision of Langston Hughes. How to be a Revolutionary is a novel that will interest anybody who has found out in his or her personal life how difficult--yet how necessary--it is to try to change the world." - Imraan Coovadia

"How to be a Revolutionary draws a line of startling connection from Harlem to Shanghai to Cape Town, traveling through the twentieth century and right up to the present. Part literary thriller for the age of rampant state surveillance, part excavation of the kinds of memories that shame nations, it tells stories of ordinary people united by a determination to improve the lot of the many, often at great personal risk to themselves. Through a virtuosic summoning of voices, each clear in its register and compelling in its force, Davids has written a book of and for the moment through which we are living. It is a brave and necessary work, illuminating the complex energies that tie together North and South, East and West, in surprising and often chilling ways. This is a novel of astonishing empathetic powers." - Patrick Flanery

"How to be a Revolutionary is a potent and timely meditation on the on-going global struggle for truth, justice, and transparency. Compellingly written and beautifully composed, the novel is both an evocation of the inherent relationship between the personal and the political and a moving testament to how different manifestations of courage are shaped by the unique challenges of the contexts from which they emerge." - Ladee Hubbard

"I loved How To Be A Revolutionary. This placing side by side of a Chinese, a South African, and an African American together should not work, yet she makes it do so authentically. It is a brave book and I pray that the world reads it with as much delight as I have and sees what a beautiful thing C.A. Davids has created." - Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi

"C.A. Davids is a wonder, moving effortlessly between generations and continents, through whispers and whirlwinds, conjuring up not only the physical details of four very different places, but their emotional thrum as well. And all the while, she keeps a steady eye on her characters, who reconcile life's injustices and indignities by simply refusing to live by lies. It's the rare novel that prompts your mind to range far and wide, your lungs to breathe more deeply. I loved it." - Brigid Pasulka

"An ambitious book, brimming with subtle insights and documenting the human cost of oppression and injustice on three continents." - Vikas Swarup


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