Nadine Dreyer Features editor

Nadine Dreyer is features editor at the Sunday Times.

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
The life, times and revival of one of SA's greatest but least-known artists

This is the story of Jackson Hlungwani and the path he took to become one of South Africa’s greatest sculptors.

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Oh Harry, did you really have to expose yourself like this?

One of the biggest shocks is how humdrum the life of the Duke of Sussex really can be. Hamsters spinning on their wheels have more compelling story ...

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Move over, Musk! Check out life in the real Twitterverse

Feathered white collar criminals and corporate raiders, and they thought he was a menace, the Chief Twit muttered to himself as he sipped on his ...

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
Is there light at the end of the tunnel? Don’t be silly!

Eskom has trapped us in an absurd merry-do-round. It shapes the zeitgeist of our country today.

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Martial law: there’s nothing quite like it

The Roman politician known as Marcus Crassus to his drinking buddies presided over the sort of fire sales you didn’t want to be part of

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Capital Q for the Queen

Like Mount Rushmore or the Great Wall of China, she was always there, a living institution rendered virtually inanimate in her almost superhuman ...

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Why alpha chickens stage coop d’etats and female hyena are ...

There’s little democracy in the natural world because virtually every species has a pecking order

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | We’ve been hurled back into the Dark Ages

If you could choose during which period of humankind’s long and fraught history you were born, chances are the Dark Ages wouldn't be high on the list.

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | It’s no laughing matter when a hyena sets its sights on you

They can eat up to a third of their body weight in one sitting, but that’s where similarities with SA’s odious gluttons end

Nadine Dreyer Features editor
NADINE DREYER | Unlike their human counterparts, these bureaucrats keep the ...

Hippos may spend up to 16 hours a day chilling in rivers and lakes, but they do an important job keeping waterways open