Jonny Steinberg


Jonny Steinberg is a South African writer and scholar. He is the author of several books about everyday life in the wake of South Africa's transition to democracy. Two of them, Midlands, about the murder of a white South African farmer, and The Number, a biography of a prison gangster, won the Sunday Times Alan Paton Award. In 2013 he was awarded the Windham-Campbell Literature Prize.

Biography

Steinberg was born and raised in South Africa. He was educated at Wits University in Johannesburg, and at the University of Oxford, where he was a Rhodes Scholar and earned a doctorate in political theory. He has worked as a journalist at a South African national daily newspaper, written scripts for television drama, and has been a consultant to the South African government on criminal justice policy. He lectures in African Studies at the University of Oxford.

Books

Steinbergs first two books Midlands, about the murder of a white South African farmer, and The Number, a biography of a prison gangster, won South Africa's premier non-fiction award, the Sunday Times Alan Paton Award.
His books also include Three-Letter Plague, which chronicles a young man's journey through South Africa's AIDS pandemic. It was a Washington Post Book of the Year and was shortlisted for the Wellcome Trust Book Prize. Steinberg is also the author of Thin Blue, an exploration of the unwritten rules of engagement between South African civilians and police, and Little Liberia: An African Odyssey in New York, about the Liberian civil war and its aftermath in an exile community in New York and described as an "extraordinary, stylistically varied mix of reportage, history and biography".
Steinberg's 2015 book, A Man of Good Hope, was described by Observer reviewer Ian Birrell, who wrote: "On the surface, it is simply the biography of a lonely young migrant who dreams of a decent life, hardening his shell and hustling to survive in hostile human environments. Yet it is really an epic African saga that chronicles some fundamental modern issues such as crime, human trafficking, migration, poverty and xenophobia, while giving glimpses into the Somali clan system, repression in Ethiopia and lethal racism in townships." The book was adapted into a stage production by Mark Dornford-May.

Awards and honours