Britten has authored two youth novels and three non-fiction books on local insults. In 2012 she wrote "... insults are also markers of collective identity. This is why I started collecting South African insults back in 2004: I wanted to understand what makes us who we are, and insults are one prism through which to view the national self...". She regularly contributes to Thought Leader, a news and opinion website run by the Mail & Guardian newspaper. She wrote the chapter How Not to Emigrate in Should I stay or should I go? To live in or leave South Africa, having returned to South Africa after emigrating to Australia in 2008. In the editor's introduction to the book, Tim Richman writes: "Many of the contributions in this book are deeply personal; such is the nature of the topic. For Sarah Britten, there was no other way to approach her traumatic and disastrous emigration experience, one that ultimately destroyed her marriage. Or, as she suggests, perhaps it extended it beyond its sell-by date. Sarah is candid, open, honest, raw – uncomfortably at times. But hers is a necessary and hugely revealing piece, clarifying both the extent of the life-hold that emigration can exert on individuals and families, as well as the stresses it can generate." At the time, she wrote about her emigration experience on her Thought Leader blog which she named Gondwanaland after the ancient southerly supercontinent that included Africa, Australia and Antarctica among other present-day landmasses.
Lipstick art
Britten paints cityscapes and other subjects, namely still life, bulls and bears, dogs, cats, horses, sharks, crocodiles, rhinos, Nguni cattle and dung beetles, with lipstick. Her art is influenced by Zoo City, a science fiction novel by South African author Lauren Beukes. On her art website, she says: "Set in Hillbrow, the zoocity of the title, it features characters mysteriously attached to animal familiars as a form of punishment. Zoo City is riotous, chaotic and completely crazy and I loved the way it brought to life the animal energy that lurks just beneath the surface of the city. After reading the book, I started experimenting with placing animals in cityscapes, both the kind that are found in cities and those that exist in Johannesburg only as metaphors – sharks and crocodiles, for example. I’ve used a limited palette of black, grey and red to evoke the dystopian atmosphere of the city, its grey grittiness a contrast to throbbing red life. The Zoo City series led to my experiments with Ngunis, which have taken me in a more colourful direction." The first public exhibition of her lipstick art, named Pulse of the City and inspired by a Land Rovermarketing campaign, was held at Velo gallery café in Braamfontein in July 2012.
Awards
2000 Sanlam Prize for Youth Literature – Silver – The Worst Year of My Life – So Far
2002 Sanlam Prize for Youth Literature – Silver – Welcome to the Martin Tudhope Show!
Publications
German translation of The Worst Year of My Life – So Far.