Join us for an evening with Yvette Christiansë,
author of Unconfessed. A book signing and reception will follow.
Slavery as it existed in Africa has
seldom been portrayed�and never with such texture, detail, and authentic emotion.
Inspired by actual 19th-century court records, Unconfessed is a breathtaking
literary tour de force. They called her Sila van den Kaap, slave woman of Jacobus
Stephanus Van der Wat of Plettenberg Bay, South Africa . A woman moved from
master to master, farm to farm, and�driven by the horrors of slavery to commit
an unspeakable crime�from prison to prison. A woman fit for hanging . . . condemned
to death on April 30, 1823, but whose sentence the English, having recently
wrested authority from the Dutch settlers, saw fit to commute to a lengthy term
on the notorious Robben Island .
Sila spends her days in the prison quarry, breaking stones for Cape Town 's
streets and walls. She remembers the day her childhood ended, when slave catchers
came �whipping the air and the ground and we were like deer whipped into the
smaller and smaller circle of our fear.� Sila remembers her masters, especially
Oumiesies (�old Missus�), who in her will granted Sila her freedom, but Theron,
Oumiesies' vicious and mercenary son, destroys the will and with it Sila's life.
Sila remembers her children, with joy and with pain, and imagines herself a
great bird that could sweep them up in her wings and set them safely on a branch
above all harm. Unconfessed is an epic novel that connects the reader
to the unimaginable through the force of poetry and a far-reaching imagination.
Yvette Christiansë was
born in South Africa under apartheid and emigrated with her family via Swaziland
to Australia at the age of eighteen. She is the author of the 1999 poetry collection
Castaway. She teaches African American literature and postcolonial
studies at Fordham University and lives in New York City . Unconfessed
is her first novel.