44 GQ.CO.ZA MAY 2017
GQ&A
W
ith colonialism
romanticised by everything
from decor, party themes,
Halloween costumes to
fashion and Taylor Swift’s music videos,
Richard Mason’s latest novel is a much-
needed tome that tackles the topic both
insightfully and entertainingly. Who Killed
Piet Barol? follows the title character as he
searches for riches in 1913 South Africa,
and sees his initially appalled attitude
to the treatment of the country’s black
population take a sharp turn in line with
his own fall from prosperity.
GQ: You’ve been described as being
part of a ‘brat pack’ of young literary
sensations. Do you feel that you were
a bratty writer after the success of your
fi rst novel, The Drowning People?
Richard Mason: That’s an interesting
question because I’m aware that some of my
friends do think that I’m a bit of a brat. But in
a way I was too polite. I always said ‘yes’ to
everything. I felt a great burden to say ‘yes’
to every interview, to every festival, to every
speech... and to show up and to really be
polite. I spent a year on tour, answering the
same questions 10 times a day, in multiple
languages, some of which I didn’t speak, and
I had to learn them. So, no, I hope that the
people who work with me don’t think I’m
a brat. You can ask them, when I’m gone
GQ: What inspired the plot of your
latest novel?
RM: I’m interested in these colonial
personalities who came to South Africa
from Europe in the late 19th centur y or early
20th century and made stuff happen in
a very big way – a lot of it appalling. These
individuals were gifted. Cecil John Rhodes
rocked up here as a teenager, ended up
owning the world’s diamond business,
being the prime minister and setting up
a country next door. But you know,
Rhodes, on one occasion when the tribes
in Rhodesia revolted , went up into the
mountains on his own and negotiated
with them in their own language, and
TAK I N G O N
A HOT TOPIC
Writer Richard Mason tackles colonialism
in his latest work of fi ction
Words by Cayleigh Bright
Photograph by Michael Lionstar
‘I decided I would write one
more book, but do it my way
- not send it to anybody,
not ask anyone’s opinion.
I went on a personal quest
for the joy of telling a story’