CLAWS Lucky Draw 2025 – win a Karavan Press book hamper and other stunning prizes

Karavan Press has been supporting the CLAWS (Clanwilliam Animal Welfare Society) Lucky Draw for the past three years and we are very happy to contribute once again to the wonderful prizes you can win in the CLAWS Luck Draw 2025.

This year’s prizes include:

OUDRIF ACCOMMODATION FOR TWO WORTH R7800

WINE FROM JOHN MAYTHAM’S COLLECTION WORTH R5000

KARAVAN PRESS BOOK HAMPER WORTH R2280

HOGHOUSE BREWING COMPANY CAFÉ VOUCHER WORTH R1000 & HOGHOUSE BREWING COMPANY BBQ VOUCHER WORTH R1000

GRAVITY ADVENTURES VOUCHER ADVENTURE FOR TWO WORTH R1100

DRIEHOEK AWARD-WINNING WINES WORTH R500

Entries close on 26 September. Draw will take place on 29 September. Winners will be announced on 30 September.

For more details, see:

CLAWS Lucky Draw

CLAWS

OUDRIF

Good luck!

UJ Prize Shortlist for Books Published in 2024 announced

Media release:

The University of Johannesburg Prize (UJ Prize) for South African Writing is pleased to announce the shortlist for books published in 2024. The Prize opened for submissions on 26 November 2024 and closed on 28 February 2025.

The UJ Prize was established in 2006 for South African writing and is not genre-specific.

We trust our panel of judges to do a fair and rigorous evaluation of submitted texts and select the most outstanding books. Following an intensive adjudication process, the judges have shortlisted the following books in their respective categories:

Debut Prize

  • Morafe: Person, Family and Nation in Colonial Bechuanaland by Khumisho Moguerane
  • Weeping Becomes a River by Siphokazi Jonas
  • Who Looks Inside by Anna Stroud

Main Prize

  • Keorapetse Kgositsile and the Black Arts Movement by Uhuru Portia Phalafala
  • The Comrade’s Wife by Barbara Boswell
  • The Lost Love of Akbar Manzil by Shubnum Khan

The prize money is R75,000 (Seventy-Five Thousand Rand only) for the main prize, and R45,000 (Forty-Five Thousand Rand only) for the debut prize. The final results will be announced before the end of September 2025. For more information, please contact the UJ Prize coordinator, Prof Siphiwo Mahala via email: siphiwom@uj.ac.za 

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Congratulations to all shortlisted authors, especially to Anna Stroud! We are thrilled that her debut novel, Who Looks Inside, is shortlisted for the UJ Debut Prize.

Earlier this year, Anna won the HSS Award for Best Fiction Emerging Author.

Thank you, Anna, for publishing with Karavan Press. It is a joy to celebrate you and this exquisite novel.

Open Book Festival 2025: Karavan Press & Holland House Books

The first weekend of September is Open Book Festival time (5-7 September 2025), and we – Karavan Press, Holland House Books and our wonderful authors – are thrilled to be part of these inspiring, thought-provoking and soul-restoring conversations.

Friday, 5 September 2025

11:00-12:00

12:30-13:30

14:00-15:00

16:00-17:00

Saturday, 6 September 2025

10:00-11:00

14:00-15:00

16:00-17:30

18:00-19:00

Sunday, 7 September 2025

14:00-15:00

Karavan Press author Nick Mulgrew is also in town for the festival, but will be wearing his publisher’s hat for the occasion and participating in a celebration of ten years of uHlanga Press. Congratulations, uHlanga, Nick and all your amazing poets. Every uHlanga poetry collection is a celebration of beauty and our humanity. Thank you for ten years of outstanding publishing!

For the full programme see: Open Book Festival

Book tickets: Webtickets

Karavan Press title: Lone Wolf Living by Werner Pretorius

LONE WOLF LIVING

by Werner Pretorius

illustrated by Dawn Bolton

Introducing Lone Wolf Living™

Sign up for the programme today and your life will be instantly more rewarding and less miserable. Take a look at our Platinum Package starring James Bond, who, as it turns out, is from Pretoria West, and Bernie de Villiers, who is falling in love with all the wrong things for all the wrong reasons. Our Gold Package offers UFOs over Jansenville and sinister nightly encounters in Cape Town. Don’t miss the exodus to Mars or get stuck at an outpost left to fend for yourself while, on a distant planet, betrayals and a betrothal take place. Buy now and avoid disappointment!

Werner Pretorius lands with this collection of lost loves and eerie worlds. Broken hearts and peril combine in these stories that scratch beneath the surface of the mundane to find the crawling things that keep us up at night.

About the author

WERNER PRETORIUS holds degrees in Publishing and English from the University of Pretoria and a Master’s in Creative Writing from the University of Cape Town. His stories and short fiction have appeared in various magazines and anthologies. Lone Wolf Living is his first collection. He lives and works in Cape Town.

About the illustrator

DAWN BOLTON is a multi-faceted creative working in various media. She is a skilled jeweller, hand-crafting items in metals and recycled plastics. Her visual art language includes painting, pencil and ink drawing, and embroidery. This is her first collection of digital drawings.

Publication date: September 2025

ISBN: 978-1-0370-9172-8

Author: Werner Pretorius

Werner Pretorius holds degrees in Publishing and English from the University of Pretoria and a Master’s in Creative Writing from the University of Cape Town. His stories and short fiction have appeared in various magazines and anthologies. Lone Wolf Living is his first collection. He lives and works in Cape Town.

Author photograph by Barend Botha

Karavan Press title: BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE – A FEMINIST APPRAISAL OF SPACE, edited by Mbali Mazibuko, Shakeelah Ismail, Charisse Louw, Ijeoma Chidi Opara & Stella Viljoen

BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE is a collection  of anarchic essays written by a new generation of everyday thinkers, activists and scholars who are figuring out their relationship to feminism. It is a radical appraisal of the home and a call to critically rethink the mechanisms that govern the ‘private’. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the home as decolonial space.

CONTRIBUTORS: Ijeoma Chidi Opara • Shakeelah Ismail • Mbali Mazibuko • Chan Croeser • Aneeqa Abrahams • Simphiwe Rens • Cassidy Robinson • Imologang M. Morulane • Nada Faleni • Waratwa Zanokuhle Miya • Ché Adams • Chelsea Holland • Charisse Louw • Kiasha Naidoo • Ernst van der Wal • Joy Watson

PRAISE for Burning Down the House:

The house in South Africa is an intimate, bordered thing, abrupt with nearness. At home in this taunting, compulsive setting, the chapters in Burning Down the House inhabit the everyday in undaunted and visionary ways. In my own agony of unrootedness in which feminism has been an anchor, I found their writing at once unmooring and consoling. This is a book I am turning into an architecture and a map. GABEBA BADEROON, author of The History of Intimacy

This intergenerational conversation about the home as a political and contradictory space presents us with opportunity to ask critical questions and to think of what it means to become better humans in the world. DINA LIGAGA, author of Women, Visibility and Morality in Kenyan Popular Media

In refusing the ideology and contradiction of home offered to us, they offer a feminist reimagining of home that we must fight and love for, just that vision of a home that we may eventually embody for a new generation. PROF PEACE KIGUWA, Psychology,
University of the Witwatersrand

Stirringly intimate, it is a powerful reminder that our feminist architectural imagination is one of our most urgent and precious tools to seize upon in our ongoing question for liberation and equality. DAPHNE A. BROOKS, author of Liner Notes for the Revolution:
The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound

In ‘Bringing Feminist Theory Home’, the introduction to Living a Feminist Life, Sara Ahmed urges us to think, feel, work and live differently – at the same time that we ‘burn down’ the doctrine and relationships that oppress us. This book, drawing together a range of essays that expose heteropatriarchal, colonial and classist assumptions about home, responds powerfully to Ahmed’s call. DESIREE LEWIS, Professor in the Women’s and Gender Studies Department at the University of the Western Cape

Publication date: September 2025

ISBN: 978-1-0370-9371-5

CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa shortlist announced!

The shortlist for the CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa — honouring the publishers who bring bold, brilliant African stories to the world — has been announced and we are thrilled that Thobeka Yose’s In Silence My Heart Speaks is among the selected titles. Congratulations to all shortlisted authors and publishers!

Thobeka, literary love and gratitude for the grace, courage and compassion with which you have shared your story with readers!


Meet all five unforgettable books chosen by the judging panel, chaired by Prof. Egara Kabaji:
 
• ‘No Pink in a Rainbow’ by Angel Patricks Amegbe, published by Masobe Books – A profound meditation on loss and the enduring power of quiet love, beautifully crafted both in prose and in print.
• ‘Dear Zimi’ by Chiziterem Chijioke, published by Quramo Publishing – A tender, courageous story of motherhood and resilience, positioning Chijioke as a significant voice in contemporary African literature.
• ‘The Comrade’s Wife’ by Barbara Boswell, published by Jacana Media – A bold, emotionally honest narrative that confronts personal and political betrayal in post-apartheid South Africa with feminist clarity.
• ‘Broken: Not a Halal Love Story’ by Fatima Bala, published by Masobe Books – A moving exploration of faith, identity, and forbidden love, balancing personal truth with spiritual devotion.
• ‘In Silence My Heart Speaks’ by Thobeka Yose, published by Karavan Press – A luminous memoir tackling mental health, abuse, betrayal, and sexual identity with honesty and defiance.
 
The winner will be revealed at CANEX@IATF2025 in Algiers, Algeria (4–10 September 2025) – the ultimate gathering for Africa’s creative industries.
 
Whether you’re a reader, writer, or culture lover, these books belong on your list.