Liz McGregor is a South African author and a journalist who worked for leading South African newspapers such as the Sunday Times and the Rand Daily Mail. Some of the books written by McGregor include Load-shedding: Writing On and Over the Edge of South Africa and Khabzela: The Life and Times of a South African.[1][2]
McGregor was born in Cape Town.[3] McGregor left South Africa in 1985, returning in 2002 to work on a story commissioned by New York Magazine.[4]
McGregor profiled the life of South Africa's popular radio DJ, Fana Khaba, in Khabzela: The Life and Times of a South African (2005).[4] The book was called a powerful and compassionate study by the Journal of Southern African Studies.[4] In Who Killed the Rain Queen? (2007), McGregor investigates the death of a Limpopo rain queen at age 25.[5]
McGregor's work, The Springbok Factory (2013), looks at the women in the lives of the Springbok Rugby players.[6] The book also examines the divide between black and white rugby players in South Africa.[7] McGregor spent two years researching her book.[6] The Cape Times called The Springbok Factory "a riveting study of the inner workings of South African rugby."[8] This book made her a "household name" in South African rugby circles.[3]