Marguerite Poland

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Marguerite Poland
Born 3 April 1950
Gauteng, South Africa
Occupation Novelist
Spouse(s) Martin Oosthuizen
Children Sue Oosthuizen and Verlie Oosthuizen

Marguerite Poland (born 3 April 1950, Johannesburg) is a South African writer and author of eleven children's books.

Early life

When she was two years old, the Poland family relocated to the Eastern Cape where she spent most of her formative years. After completing her secondary education at St Dominic's Priory School in Port Elizabeth, Poland completed her Bachelor of Arts degree at Rhodes University, majoring in Social Anthropology and Xhosa. In 1971, Marguerite Poland completed her honours degree in African languages at Stellenbosch University. In 1977 she obtained her doctorate degree in Zulu folklore – her field of speciality being cattle. Her doctoral thesis was 'A Descriptive Study of the Sanga-Nguni Cattle of the Zulu People' – from the University of Natal. She also has an Honours degree in Comparative African Languages and an MA and PhD in Zulu Literature from the University of KwaZulu-Natal.[1]

Personal life

Poland also worked as a social worker in Port Elizabeth and in Durban. In 1997. Poland contributed to a weekly column in the local newspaper, The Mercury. Poland also worked as an ethnologist at the Iziko South African Museum in Cape Town. Most recently she taught English for a year at St. Andrew's College in Grahamstown, where she was commissioned to write a history of the school to mark the 150th anniversary of its foundation in 2005.The resulting publication 'The Boy in You: a Biography of St Andrew's College, Grahamstown 1855–2005' was launched in South Africa and London in 2008.(www.sacschool.com) Poland is married to attorney, Martin Oosthuizen, who was also raised in the Eastern Cape and attended St Andrew's College. They have two daughters and three grandchildren and divide their time between Durban and Grahamstown where she acts as historian to the College.

Creative Work

Among her works are The Mantis and the Moon and Woodash Stars for both of which she received the Percy FitzPatrick Award, the first two books to receive this award. The Mantis and the Moon also received the Sankei Honorable Award for translation into Japanese. She has written four adult novels. The Train to Doringbult was short listed for the CNA Awards and Shades for the M-Net Award. Shades has been a matriculation setwork for over a decade throughout South Africa. Her third novel, Iron Love, draws much of its inspiration from the lives of a group of boys just prior to the Great War of 1914–1918. A stage adaption written and directed by Ingrid Wylde appeared at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown in 2006. Her more recent works, Recessional for Grace and The Abundant Herds: a Celebration of the Nguni Cattle of the Zulu People have been adapted for documentary films. Her work is translated into several languages including French and Japanese. She was chosen to appear in Twentieth Century Children's Writers,[2] the 'International Who's Who', published by Cambridge University Press and is a featured writer in the KZN Literary Tourism project.[3]

Awards

Marguerite Poland is the recipient of two national Lifetime Achievement Awards for English literature; one from the Department of Arts and Culture in 2005 and then in 2010 from the South African Literary Awards.[citation needed]

Poland was the first recipient of the Percy FitzPatrick Award for children's literature in 1979 for The Mantis and the Moon and in 1983 she won the award again for Woodash Stars. In 1984 she received the Japanese Sankei Honourable Award for The Mantis and the Moon in translation.[citation needed]

Train to Doringbult was shortlisted for the CNA Award in 1988 and in 1994 Shades was shortlisted for the M-Net Award. In 2013 Taken Captive by Birds was shortlisted for the Nielsen Booksellers' Choice Award.

Poland received the Nielsen Booksellers' Choice Award in 2015 for her novel, The Keeper: This prize is given to the title that South Africa’s booksellers most enjoyed reading, promoting and selling in 2014.[4]

In 2015 she won the Ingwazi Award for contribution to the cultural history of KwaZulu-Natal.

On 28 April 2016, the Order of Ikhamanga - Silver (OIS) was conferred on Marguerite Poland‚ for "her excellent contribution to the field of indigenous languages, literature and anthropology".[5]

Works

Novels

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Non-Fiction

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Children's books

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  • Die Bidsprikaan en die Maan, 1981
  • The Bush Shrike, 1982, Raven Press
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Anthologies

Contributed to:

  • South Africa 27 April 1994 Ed. Andre Brink, 1994 Quellerie
  • 27 April, One Year Later. Ed Andre Brink, 1995 Quellerie
  • Madiba Magic, date? Tafelberg
  • Keersy/Crossing Over, Stories from a new South Africa compiled by Linda Rode and Jakes Gerwel

References

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External links