This fictional memoir takes us on the personal trek of Esther Cronjé, an
Afrikaner woman, across a panorama of times and places. Sometimes cruel,
sometimes warm-hearted, occasionally whimsical, this account carries us
from the savagery of the Anglo-Boer War to the isolation of a mining
camp without running water in a place called Lohatla, somewhere in the
wilderness of the southern Kalahari. The chronicle opens on 12 April
1901 when the pregnant Esther and her little boy, Piet, are forcibly
removed by British forces from their farm in the Warrenton District of
the Northern Cape and taken to Warrenton Station for transportation to
the Kimberley Camp, one of several dozen such concentration camps
operated in South Africa by the British invaders. Along Esther's
journey, the reader will discover different aspects of her resilient
personality: her questioning of Christianity, her dislike of the British
Empire, her disdain for men who desert their families to go to war and,
above all, her love and open-handedness towards all who enter her life.