Part thriller and mystery, a story of becoming oneself and then seeing oneself undone. This is a serious book that pulls the reader into realms that many of us are scared to venture Naude has written a masterpiece of literature with an end that will leave you staring into the heart of light or darkness. But, mostly looking towards the light.
* Cape Times *
S. J. Naude, who also wrote the much acclaimed Alphabet of Birds, has captured the spirit of Margaret Thatcher's Britain of the 80s perfectly: the squats, the depressing grey of London, the anti-apartheid campaigners, the beginning of HIV Aids and of people with big dreams and visions for a better world who join forces to make ends meet. The Third Reel is a complex novel with many layers and allegories. It is an unsettling book that will give you plenty to think about. However, it is compelling reading and is just as compulsive as Etienne's search for the missing reel.
-- Brian Joss * The Gremlin *
Reading this book I was thunderstruck, with all that it implies: humidity, lightning, sweat, frissons of fear, the commanding of attention. Look at me, hear me. Reading SJ Naude's The Third Reel pinioned me throughout, exhausting, exhiliarating. It is a magnificent, brilliant feat of writing, visceral and unflinching, and marks the point at which Naude moves to the front line of the best of South African writers ... Few books in the past years have I thought of more highly, or affected me as much."
-- Beverley Roos-Muller * Cape Argus *
A work that definitely pushes the boundaries of convention, hope and desire, it is written in an eminently readable and beautiful style ... The story is intricate, ambitious and haunting. Reflective of the cities in which the book is set, you'll relive the sights and smells of an era that was fraught with sex, music, illness, loss and love. The construction is that of a fine piece of architecture, brilliantly fashioned and held together, taking us on a step-by-step journey through all the rooms of the psyche ... Without doubt a book of great literary standing and one that holds the reader in its thrall, never losing its grip on you.
-- Beryl Eichenberger * The Books Page *
A magisterial novel ... rarely have I been so captivated by an Afrikaans novel, so fascinated and impressed, kept so busy by it, even after a second read. With S J Naude's The Third Reel, we have a formidable new voice in Afrikaans, firmly established. The fact that he is writing in Afrikaans, and on the black wall of pessimism descending around us, takes one's breath away -- and provides a peeping hole to the light beaming on the other shore."
-- Helize van Vuuren * LitNet *
To describe this novel as captivating would be a euphemism ... People will be talking about this novel for a long time ... With this book, Naude's talent as a writer is confirmed. In my view, it is one of the literary highlights of 2017.
-- Dewald Koen * Die Burger *
Like all good art, The Third Reel does not conform to conventional expectations. It is a novel that is unsettling due to its uniqueness and delivers a real punch. It belongs on a shelf with the best Afrikaans novels.
-- Neil Cochrane * Rapport *
Into a mid-1980s London of Thatcherism, post-punk, Aids, anti-apartheid campaigning and general greyness comes Etienne, a 22-year-old South African who has fled his homeland to avoid conscription and escape his homophobic father. He finds love there, meeting a taboo-breaking German artist named Axel while living in run-down squats and studying film. When Etienne discovers the first of three reels of an obscure German film from the 1930s, he becomes determined to find the other two. His quest takes him to pre-unification Berlin, where Axel has disappeared and where Etienne finds evidence of a group of Jewish filmmakers who operated during the Nazi era. Naude's second novel is a multi-layered work that delves deeply into the themes of identity and love, in which Etienne's quest for truth becomes an exploration of himself and ultimately draws him back to the land of his birth. This is an outstanding, accomplished novel with both literary depth and a powerful emotional charge.
-- Alastair Mabbott * The Herald *
A young gay man from South Africa flees to 80s London to avoid national service and ends up embroiled in an obsessive affair that leads him to East Berlin in search of a lost pre-war movie. I loved the tone and feel of this, and the quest is great.
-- Scott Pack