<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In this gripping social history of South Africa, award-winning journalist Mark Gevisser follows the family of former South African President Thabo Mbeki to make sense of his legacy and understand the future of the country under new President Jacob Zuma. With unparalleled access to Mbeki and Zuma, as well as other key players in the ANC, Gevisser presents an intimate yet accessible account of South Africa's past, present and future. With his stunning account of the Mbeki family's history as a backdrop, Gevisser fleshes out a monumental period in world history that will continue to shape African politics for years to come.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"Gevisser, calling on a vast amount of research, is able to assemble a compelling explanation of this most impenetrable persona." --<i>The Nation</i> <p/>"A Legacy of Liberation is memorable and definitive. Accompanying Mbeki on his life journey, Gevisser is both informative and moving, passionate and dispassionate... Obviously we cannot be brought to pardon or sympathise with Mbeki's estrangement from Mandela and his stance on Aids or on Zimbabwe, but Gevisser helps us to understand where they come from, and how - and why - he has developed such seemingly monstrous attitudes...Few books in recent years have managed to bring the reader to such a deep and disquieting understanding of Paton's 'beloved country'." --<i>Andre Brink, Daily Telegraph</i> <p/>"The best [of four new books about South Africa], Mark Gevisser's A Legacy of Liberation: Thabo Mbeki and the Future of the South African Dream seeks to understand how a man who came to power with so much goodwill behind him is today regarded with hostility... Gevisser carefully listens to his subject and those around him before artfully dissecting his thinking." --<i>Chris McGreal, The Observer</i> <p/>"Irresistible detail about Mbeki in Britain in the 1960s" --<i>Stephen Robinson, Sunday Times</i> <p/>"An epic biography" --<i>Matthew Kaminski, The Wall Street Journal</i> <p/>"An impressive feat of journalism...Gevisser writes well, particularly when he is witness to an event, when his narrative leaps off the page...offers some intriguing insights." --<i>Suzanne Daley, New York Times Book Review</i> <p/>"There's still a tragic element in the multilayered narrative Mark Gevisser has painstakingly constructed over a period of eight years [with] Mbeki, who had scratchy relations with the press. The version of Mark Gevisser's book that now appears here after Mbeki has been driven into sullen private life covers the final stages of his fall, filling the gap in the original, and still come in at less than half the length of the South African edition. Only specialists will miss the details that have been condensed here or hacked away." --<i>Joseph Lelyveld, New York Review of Books</i> <p/>"A monumental biography" --<i>Barry Bearak, The New York Times</i> <p/>"A judicious and an eye-opening account of a life intersecting history at the most profound level." --<i>Publishers Weekly (starred review)</i> <p/>"One of the great epic books to come out of South Africa since the end of apartheid. Rigorously reported, beautifully written, A Legacy of Liberation is at once a rich social history of the black experience under apartheid--as seen through its leaders, movements and people-- and a brilliant expedition through the country's political and personal landscape, past, present and future." --<i>Katrina Vanden Heuvel, publisher of The Nation and editor of A Just Response and a Dictionary of Republicanism</i> <p/>"If Thabo Mbeki has been an enigma to the West, no one better explains him, how he got that way, and how it affected his place in the history of South Africa--old and new--than Mark Gevisser. Exhaustive research, incredible and impeccable contacts and the skill of a gifted writer and analyst combine to make this one of the best chronicles of a man and a movement in our time." --<i>Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Special Africa correspondent, NPR and author New News out of Africa: Uncovering the African Renaissance</i> <p/>"A landmark biography that provides invaluable insights into the personality, politics, and eventually the legacy of one of Africa's most brilliant yet controversial leaders. There are lessons here that go well beyond South Africa." --<i>Princeton Lyman, Council for Foreign Relations and Former U.S. ambassador to South Africa.</i> <p/>"Gevisser's superbly articulated and carefully dispassionate biography does Mbeki justice, warts and all. The author well captures the earlier skilled, charming, and manipulative diplomat -- the public face of the ANC in exile. He understands how Mbeki became a communist and how he left the South African Communist Party, why he succeeded so dramatically as president, and ultimately why the enemies lurking within the ANC eventually pulled him down." --<i>Choice</i> <p/>"This is the finest book I have read out of post-apartheid South Africa. Mark Gevisser makes sense not only of Thabo Mbeki but of the struggle itself, and he does so in lucid, brilliant prose." --<i>Lynn Freed, author of The Servants' Quarters</i> <p/>"This extraordinary biography draws the reader into the multilayered world in which Mbeki rose to leadership and shaped the destiny of millions. A splendid contribution to our understanding of contemporary South Africa." --<i>Gail M. Gerhart, author of Black Power in South Africa</i> <p/>"Mark Gevisser has given us a wonderfully readable study of a powerful man's character: he shows how Thabo Mbeki shaped, and was shaped by, South Africa's troubled history. After a decade interviewing key players in the liberation struggle and their sometimes forgotten families, Gevisser writes with both compassion and a keenly critical eye. A fine wordsmith with an eye for evocative detail, he exposes the demons besetting the South African dream. A Legacy of Liberation is crucial for understanding what lies ahead for South Africa in the twenty-first century." --<i>Diana Wylie, author of Art and Revolution</i> <p/>"[Gevisser] seeks to understand how a man who came to power with so much good will behind him is today regarded with hostility... Gevisser carefully listens to his subject and those around him before artfully dissecting his thinking." --<i>The Observer</i> <p/>"[A] stunningly good read." --<i>The Herald (Glasgow)</i> <p/>"Probably the finest piece of non-fiction to come out of South Africa since the end of apartheid." --<i>Martin Plaut, Times Literary Supplement</i> <p/>"Cerebral yet intimate, and beautifully written." --<i>Richard Calland, Mail and Guardian</i> <p/>"Anyone who wants to go beyond those clichés, and also to understand what has happened in South Africa since the end of white rule should read [this]. In the process they will get swept up in an extraordinarily compelling and at times infuriating and tragic story... Far and away the most authoritative book on Nelson Mandela's successor...Gevisser - one of South Africa's foremost journalists - writes with passion and conviction...Neither simplistic nor synthetic. Rather it is one of the great explanatory narratives of South Africa over the past 60-odd years." --<i>Alec Russell, Financial Times</i> <p/>"Retraces in great detail the president's life from his childhood in rural Transkei to his 28 years in exile and his ascent to power. In the process he sheds considerable light on more than half a century of South Africa's difficult history. ... essential reading for anyone intrigued by South Africa's complex philosopher-king." --<i>The Economist</i> <p/>"Deep and fascinating [study] ... a human portrait of a man variously called an enigma, Machiavellian, an intellectual, a visionary and Stalinist." --<i>The Times (SA)</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Mark Gevisser is an award-winning journalist who has written for publications including <i>The New York Times</i>, <i>The Nation</i>, London's <i>The Guardian, </i>and the Johannesburg <i> Sunday Times and Mail & Guardian. </i> He was educated at Yale University. He is currently Writer-in-Residence at the University of Pretoria and lives in France and South Africa.
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