cover image Innocents in Africa: An American Family's Story

Innocents in Africa: An American Family's Story

Drury Pifer. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt P, $24.95 (338pp) ISBN 978-0-15-107564-5

With wry humor and sharp observation, playwright Pifer elegantly mixes memory and research to reconstruct the world of his South African boyhood from 1933 to 1945. Pifer's father, an idealistic mining engineer in search of challenge and stability during the Depression, found it in Africa, but his earnest American egalitarianism soon put him in conflict with Afrikaner mine overseers, and his career under magnate Sir Ernest Oppenheimer stalled. The author deftly evokes his family--``my mother had the freedom of a disobedient daughter''--and the isolation of the desert town of Oranjemund. The book is even more resonant in its snapshots of mid-century Southern Africa: the still-simmering enmity between Afrikaners and the English; the ripples from Hitler's war in what prior to WW I had been the German territory of South West Africa (currently Namibia). Pifer's knowing account of the travails of servants--``the chasm that exists between white mistress and African maid''--still rings true today. Photos. (Feb.)