R35.00 Standard shipping using one of our trusted couriers applies to most areas in South Africa. Some areas may attract a R30.00 surcharge. This will be calculated at checkout if applicable. Check my rate
The seller has indicated that they will usually have this item
ready to ship within 14 business days.
Shipping time depends on your delivery address.
The most accurate delivery time will be calculated at checkout,
but in general, the following shipping times apply:
1990 first edition hardcover with dust jacket and 275 pages in very good condition. Bookshop stamp in front.
There is something magical about the vast semi-desert region known , simply as the Karoo. Despite its frequent droughts and extremes of climate, the Karoo nurtures life in great abundance and its plains teem with animals of every description. After the seasonal rains the recovery of the Veld is miraculous: frogs chorus in full throat and a carpet of brilliant flowers spreads dramatically over the once barren wasteland.
To the passing motorist who has been driving in the heat for hour upon hour, its desolation and aridity seem harsh indeed. But to those who have been captivated by its fierce, beauty, the Karoo is a place unlike any other. This land of sudden contrasts cast its spell on author Joan Southey. As a young bride she entered farming life not knowing the difference between a sheep and a goat, but gradually as she settled into the rhythms of the Karoo, it became her home.
In FOOTPRINTS IN THE KAROO Joan Southey takes the reader on an energetic rural journey through her beloved Karoo going into the homes of many prominent farming families; she provides a glimpse of what actually happens on their farms dotted like oases over the dusty countryside. She acquaints us with the legendary Karoo hospitality, best displayed at social gatherings, weddings, funerals and the inimitable New Years Eve Dance at the town hall. She reveals the delights of the country kitchen with its shelves of bottled preserves and strings of home-made wors, and she allows us to eavesdrop on the party-line telephone exchange, its operators presiding authoritatively over all local news and gossip.
Visits to the barbershop, shopping expeditions to town, dispersal sales and street auctions all are described with affection and humour and weave a rich tapestry of farming life in the Karoo. Like generations of farmers before her, Joan Southey has succumbed to the pull of that old Karoo magic and for her there is really no other life.