
http://www.uwc.ac.za/arts/bushvibes/index.htm
REVIEW
Possibly the most daunting postcolonial novel to emerge from South Africa, Hectic most certainly lives up to its name.
The main character in the novel is a character called Cool Red Kowalski and all of the action is seen through his eyes.
Cool Red is his 30s, but with no job, no money, no driver’s licence, no girlfriend and positively Neanderthal attitudes to other people, his prospects are, ah, limited shall we say ? Yet Kaganof uses this horribly flawed character to take us on a gut-wrenching picaresque journey through the various subcultures that inhabit the low life part of Sea Point, Cape Town.
Kowalski lives on Carling Black Label, cadged sex, whatever drugs are going and through all this, he nurtures an ambition to marry the bizarre Miss Absa Mallurby, the barmaid queen of Stones pool hall. Along with his buddy Sven and occasionally the ugly and horribly screwed up girl, Spacey, Cool Red Kolwalski endures a number of excruciating incidents, all of which are building towards the novel’s explosive ending.
Couched in a deliciously wicked ironic framework, this novel blazes along at warp speed. Beware though, it’s not for the faint hearted as Kowalski appears to have a full frontal go at anything that crosses his path. Car guards, Afrikaners, politicians, Rasta’s, the magic mushroom Observatory hippy types and pretty much everybody in between, are pulled apart by a character with no obvious moral framework. This, ironically, is what gives the novel its strength. The humour borders on the grotesque most of the time, but in fine postcolonial style, the function of the humour is to subvert entrenched conservative values and challenge supposedly enlightened or democratic attitudes.
Hectic is tough meat. Some will find the text too “18 SVL” for their liking. But Hectic needs to be read; it deserves to be on an underground list of “must reads” along with Bitterkomix and the recent stuff by Koos Kombuis. If there was a single novel that could signal a spiraling breakaway direction in SA postcolonial writing, then Hectic must rank as the groundbreaker.
The writer, Aryan Kaganof, is a South African filmmaker who went into exile during the apartheid years. Whilst living and working in the Netherlands, he established a global reputation for aggressive underground documentaries and in your face short films. Hectic represents something of a first for independent or self publishing in SA. It has been through 5 printings since 2002 and is a product of the new technology of print-on-demand. Basically print-on-demand requires that a text be completed in digital format and copies are printed as and when required; there being no need for vast print volumes as in a conventional print run. This process permits an author to bypass traditional publishing routes and take control of the entire book production and marketing process for him/herself.
I bought my copy at Exclusive Books, ironic proof that even the most radical and subversive things run the risk of being embraced by the establishment!
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ISBN 0-9584660-1-7