A third child was not on his parents’' 'want-list'. It was hard enough supporting two much older children and a printing business struggling to exist.

When Fedler was about three, his mother had a 'nervous breakdown' which is when he remembers seeing his first pencil and knowing precisely what it was that he wanted to do with his life.

There are no coincidences in Fedler's life. He believes that a hand of destiny has steered his path. Many dramatic encounters (not with aliens or spirits, but with everyday people) have shaped him and he wouldn't have missed any of it.

Fedler's story is intensely personal and honest, with a powerful combination of humour, emotion and community history. Out of Line attempts to do a few short things. It is an autobiography but it is also an attempt to capture a particular history of a specific generation: that of the Jewish baby boomers who descended from mainly Lithuanian stock.

Fedler has been a leading South African cartoonist for more than 50 years, and his earliest dream was to work for Walt Disney. He got to visit Disney World and could not wait to leave. He has never been to Europe or Brakpan and is a pure product of Johannesburg. The last on thing his wish list was to become a political cartoonist. He is married to a doctor, has three daughters: a doctor, a lawyer and author and a media boff as well as three grandchildren and a cat called Smudge.


For more information visit the Out of Line website.

Out of Line: A Memoir is published by Tracey McDonald Publishers at a recommended retail price of R250.