Abstract:
Authors of creative writing in the Afrikaans language find a rich source of dramatic material in the Anglo-Boer War of 1899 to
1902. Themes from this war that lend themselves superbly to be woven into historical novels and short stories, are the
concentration camps (where 28 000 Boer civilians died); the bitterness that plagued Afrikaners in the aftermath of the war; the
pride in Boer heroism on the battlefield; important historical figures; treason that lurked in Boer ranks; the relations, usually
fraught, with the British, with black people, with fellow-burghers and those with Boer women, often at an individual level. Then
there were the experiences of prisoners of war; and the Boers’ heartfelt religiosity—on the one hand the deepening of the
spiritual experience and on the other the incidence of apostasy; the disillusionment of defeat; and the challenge of reconstruction
after the war. In this paper recent historical fiction that has appeared since 1998 from distinguished Afrikaans writers on the
Anglo-Boer War is assessed to establish its historical authenticity. The author determines whether what is portrayed is historically
correct; what was possible but verges on the improbable, and what is factually incorrect. The works of Christoffel Coetzee, Ingrid
Winterbach, Sonja Loots, P.G. du Plessis, Karel Schoeman, Zirk van den Berg, Margaret Bakkes, Jeanette Ferreira, Engela van
Rooyen and Eleanor Baker are assessed. Finally, an attempt is made to indicate the fruits of co-operation between the writer of
historical fiction, the publisher and the historian.