I have been drumming my fingers waiting for a dozen or so Chinese friends to tell me what they thought of Obama winning. I told them I would weave their thoughts into a blog. They promised me they would. So far I have caught only two tadpoles on my email: “Personally, I think for a […]
Rod MacKenzie
CRACKING CHINA was previously the title of this blog. That title was used as the name for Rod MacKenzie's second book, Cracking China: a memoir of our first three years in China. From a review in the Johannesburg Star: " Mackenzie's writing is shot through with humour and there are many laugh-out-loud scenes". Cracking China is available as an eBook on Amazon Kindle or get a hard copy from www.knowledgethirstmedia.co.za.
His previous book is a collection of poetry,Gathering Light.
A born and bred South African, Rod now lives in Auckland, New Zealand, after a number of years working in southern mainland China and a stint in England.
Under the editorship of David Bullard and Michael Trapido he had a column called "The Mocking Truth" on NewsTime until the newszine folded.
He has a Master's Degree in Creative Writing from the University of Auckland. if you are a big, BIG publisher you should ask to see one of his many manuscript novels. Follow Rod on Twitter @ https://twitter.com/Rod_in_China
‘Upon entering, abandon all reason’
“Why can’t I use one of our new classrooms downstairs when I teach on weekends?” I asked Cindy, the campus manageress. It’s too dangerous,” Cindy replied. My eyebrows rose as I tried to figure out that one. One of the really good private schools I freelance for in Shanghai, with the stunningly unoriginal and redundant […]
What does your loo say about Yu?
Not always one for toilet humour, I still had to chuckle about a public toilet in Munich which has recently been converted into an art museum. Of course wonderful articles like this inspire puns. Creating art, like going to the loo, is a great form of relief. One is able to vent and offload and […]
A day in the life of Mac the Inarb (I’m Not a Racist But … )
Inarb Mac snores and dreams on bed-branch deep in Shanghai jungle, writing South African poems in his sub-conch-iousness … An inarb called Mac would despair Over what others preferred to wear. His clothes? Stained glass. You could see his arse, Rainbow Nation cheeks with flair. Inarb Mac grunts, wakes up on bed-branch. Rattles conch-iousness. Scratches […]
Wolves in wolves’ clothing: SA security guards get police authority
I hugely welcome the decision to start giving security guards in Jo’burg the same status as police officers. If I was still living in South Africa I would be enormously relieved. The police force is hopelessly inadequate. This is not to say that many of the men in blue are not fine officers; they simply […]
Scrapping the Springbok emblem? “Hier kom die Blomme”
It is fairly well known that most swimmer athletes prefer to wear Speedo, not because its gossamer lightness is any different to other swimsuits. It is the deep, psychological association of great success with the brand. The Speedo company can proudly and honestly brag that 70% of swimming medals were won by athletes wearing its […]
Pigs’ brains in a skottel: interviews with the Chinese (Ray)
I despaired as I looked at the editing job in front of me. This being Ray’s response to my interview questions for Chinese people. His English bore some resemblance to a child’s bowl of alphabet soup in which he is thwacking his spoon about among the noodle letters. I did not want to wade through […]
Road Rage in SA blogs
We’ve all been hooted at by cars and motorbikes. Sometimes this happens when you are only a lowly pedestrian. All the commuting equipment I have in the world is my legs and shoes. But it’s a unique experience – the first hundred or so times in China – when you are walking on a sidewalk […]
Ching chong Chinaman & the MRI brain scan
I see the dreaded abbreviation MRI on the medical form. The Shanghaiese lady doctor gives me a worried look after examining me. I couldn’t stand on one leg, kept falling. And my ears ringing all the time, the whine of electronic gnats. People swim in and out of focus. The doctor patters off something to […]
I don’t like bitching but …
I don’t like bitching, but (so sure, here’s the but) if Bruce Cohen in his blog, A nightmare called Nedbank, thinks his banking issues were hell — and they were — try China. We’re in the Stone Age here. Might as well stick your precious shells under a rock in your cave. Huh? Readers might […]
Boerewors and chopsticks: interviews with the Chinese (Janet)
When I write about China, I prefer to keep the topics at a grass-roots level. This is the first in a series of interviews with Chinese people in Shanghai. The first is my 26-year-old Chinese teacher and friend, Wei Qian, English name Janet. Her parents, from Sichuan province, grew up in the Cultural Revolution and […]
New TRC enquiry needed: “corporal punishment” in SA schools
In South African schools “corporal punishment” was not only allowed, it was encouraged. The term is a euphemism filled with denial. The reality was beating the living daylights out of bewildered male children and violating their vulnerable, private space in a sensual manner that bordered on rape. As a result I lived much of my […]