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Rayda Jacobs
South African writer and filmmaker (1947–2024) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rayda Jacobs (6 March 1947 – 29 October 2024) was a South African writer and filmmaker.[1]
Life and career
Jacobs was born in Diep River, Cape Town, on 6 March 1947. She began writing at a young age.[1] In 1968, she moved to Toronto, Canada.[2] She married there, had two children and later divorced.[1] Her first book The Middle Children, a collection of short stories, was published in Canada in 1994. Jacobs returned to South Africa the following year. Her novel Eyes of the Sky, published in 1996, received the Herman Charles Bosman Prize for English fiction.[2]
She wrote a series of feature articles for the Cape Times and hosted radio programs.[2] She also produced and directed documentaries for television, including God Has Many Names and Portrait of Muslim Women.[1]
Jacobs died in Toronto, Ontario, on 29 October 2024, at the age of 77.[3]
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Selected works
Source:[2]
- The Slave Book, novel (1998)
- Sachs Street, novel (2001)
- Confessions of a Gambler, novel (2003), received the Sunday Times Fiction Prize and the Herman Charles Bosman Prize, adapted for film
References
External links
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