Cruel Crazy Beautiful World (song)
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Troy Blacklaws is a writer and teacher from South Africa. He was born on 9 September 1965 in
Pinetown, Natal Province Pinetown is a large area that is part of the eThekwini Metropolitan Municipality, inland from Durban in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Pinetown is situated 16 km west of Durban at an elevation of 1,000 to 1,300 feet (305 to 395 m). History Pi ...
. After his schooling at
Paarl Boys' High School Paarl Boys' High School, known in Afrikaans as Hoër Jongenskool Paarl (also known as Boishaai) is one of the oldest schools in South Africa, built in 1868. The school is situated in Paarl, a town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. The ...
he studied at Rhodes University before being conscripted in to the South African Defence Force. After serving in the army Blacklaws began teaching English. He is currently teaching at the International School of Luxembourg. Blacklaws' first novel, ''Karoo Boy'', was published in 2004. The book was described as "a riotous vision of 1976 Cape Town" in Anderson Tepper's '' Village Voice'' review and "sensual, cinematic" in '' The New York Times''. His second novel was ''Blood Orange'', the story of a white boy in Africa. It was first published in 2005 and is a fusion of memoir and fiction. The novel was adapted for the stage by Blacklaws, Greig Coetzee and Craig Morris. The play, directed by Coetzee, was first performed by Morris at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown, South Africa, in July 2006. In 2010 Blacklaws published a fable: ''Bafana Bafana : A Story of Soccer, Magic and Mandela''. Art by Andrew Stooke. Vikas Swarup, author of '' Slumdog Millionaire'', had this to say of it: "A magical fable. Troy Blacklaws effortlessly conjures up the sights, sounds and rhythms of the South African landscape." His third novel, ''Cruel Crazy Beautiful World'', was published in 2011 in South Africa. The words of the title are taken from a song by Johnny Clegg. The story is set in post-apartheid South Africa in 2004.


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{{DEFAULTSORT:Blacklaws, Troy Living people 1965 births South African writers Alumni of Paarl Boys' High School