Lauren Liebenberg

Lauren Liebenberg

Current title
Author of The Voluptuous Delights of Peanut Butter & Jam; The West Rand Jive Cats Boxing Club; Cry Baby and a forthcoming title to be released in 2019

Course at Wits Business School
Master of Business Administration, 1999

A defining moment in my career

I used to try candy-coat things, but no longer: giving birth is less painful, less bloody and infinitely quicker than getting your first novel published. If you haven’t been smothered under the avalanche of “Dear Author, Thank you for your submission, but …” slips by the time you find a publisher, you and your manuscript will still have to face the pitiless glint of your editor’s scythe. The ego-pummelling will at least arm you for bad reviews once your novel is published, (akin to eavesdropping on a conversation about yourself in the smoke-room, during which everyone agrees that you suck).

Of course, once you have won a major literary prize, you can use the obscene prize money to bribe someone at Amazon to have those reviewers blocked. Or shot. But even while waiting for that fine day, I gotta say, it’s still worth it: We all cast ourselves as the flawed but gallant – dare I say, sexy? – heroes in our own fictionalised life stories, but writers take it to another level. It might look like I spend my days just sitting, but behind my dull gaze, as my fingers flit across the keyboard, I am no longer living a “stick to the speedlimit in my Volvo” life – instead I’ve opened the throttle on the highway after taking a long, slow pull on a bottle of moonshine.

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  • Mohammed Majam

    The Wits Business School has played an incredibly important role in shaping not just my career but also much of the person I am today. There have been several defining moments in my career, but undoubtedly the moment that stands out was when I was enrolled on the Management Advancement Programme (MAP) in 2008 with classmates a lot more senior and experienced than me.

  • Deon Opperman

    The defining moment of my career happened when I was 12 years old. My father was the managing director of Glenton & Mitchell in the Eastern Cape, the company that launched Joko Tea during the first half of the 20th century. 

  • Judy Dlamini

    My career started at KEH VIII Hospital in Durban as a medical intern. It’s been an exciting journey! The first milestone was opening my medical practice in eMlazi, the second biggest township in the country.

  • Takeshi Kimura

    There is no doubt that applying to business school can be a very stressful undertaking. However, even after my graduation more than ten years ago, I can say Wits Business School was a great fit and special for me with quality time spent.

One Comment

  1. having grown up in Krugersdorp but now living in a small town in Australia, I was stunned to find your west rand cons book on the library shelf there. I just loved it and now visiting my fam in SA I have brought a copy for them to read. We are curious as to where Lauren gleaned her knowledge of Krugies??

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