South Africa was at war. Mostly with itself. For those in power in the most infamously segregated of societies, the enemy was not just on the northern borders or in the black townships. The battle was on for the hearts and minds of sectors of the white community where confidence in the policies of the Afrikaaner Nationalist Government was lowest.
Young white men, conscripted to defend the country, were leaving in droves. Some stayed around for their call-up but refused to bear arms despite lengthy terms of imprisonment. Others hoped to hell the revolution they'd feared was inevitable would wait at least until they had completed national service.
A reluctant conscript, Larry Schwartz had intended to flee. Instead, he found himself on a troop train headed north to camp outside Pretoria to serve in the odious army of apartheid.
'The Wild Almond Line' alternates between military misadventure and a generational saga in which Larry traces his family through migration from Eastern Europe at the turn of the century through to its experience of a divided country.