Contemporary Literary Criticism


Paton, Alan (Stewart) | Anthony Delius

ANTHONY DELIUS

"I have been a teacher all my life", says the now septuagenarian Alan Paton in his absorbing Towards the Mountain….

However, if after … much discouragement in confronting some of the most disturbing problems of our century—racism, nationalism, violence—this indefatigable man is still trying to teach us something, he has chosen the most engaging way of doing it. The account of his youth and early career as a science master, husband and lover against the background of the subtropical beauty of Natal, and his later career as a reformer of a reformatory for black delinquents outside Johannesburg, makes compelling reading, and culminates in the final excitement of Paton's feverishly composing a best-seller while visiting penal institutions in Europe and America from Borstal to Alcatraz. He writes in a rigorously unmannered prose, lightened by gentle irony, sometimes breaking into comedy—to my mind this is his best writing yet.

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