Description
July’s People by Nobel Prize-winning author Nadine Gordimer is a searing, thought-provoking novel set during an imagined civil war in apartheid-era South Africa. As the country’s cities erupt into violent battlegrounds, liberal white couple Bam and Maureen Smales are forced to flee Johannesburg. Their longtime servant, July, rescues them and takes them to seek refuge in his rural village — a place where the social order they have always known is turned upside down.
In this tense and unsettling setting, Gordimer explores shifting power dynamics, cultural collision, and the fragility of identity in times of crisis. As the Smales family struggles to adapt to life as outsiders in July’s world, and July himself navigates his new position of authority, the novel lays bare the uneasy alliances, unspoken resentments, and moral reckonings at the heart of a nation on the edge of transformation. First published in 1981, July’s People remains a courageous and unsettling examination of race, privilege, and survival.
Essential reading for those interested in South African literature, social commentary, and fiction that interrogates complex human and political realities.






















