Dayspring by C. J. Driver to be launched at Clarke’s Bookshop

Karavan Press and uHlanga invite you to the Cape Town launch of C. J. Driver‘s posthumous memoir Dayspring, edited and with a foreword by J. M. Coetzee. The book will be launched with a discussion between David Attwell and Maeder Osler.

Tuesday, 16 July 2024, at Clarke’s Bookshop, 199 Long Street, Cape Town. Free entry!

It has been such an honour and joy to work on this stunning memoir with J. M. Coetzee, Dorothy Driver and Nick Mulgrew, and I look forward so much to sharing the book with readers.

I want to thank J. M. Coetzee and the Driver Family for entrusting us with the manuscript. I did not know Jonty myself, but I read his work, and we corresponded occasionally about his New Contrast subscription when I was the business manager and one of the board members of the SALJ. He was always supportive and kind and lovely to engage with. Reading the manuscript he left behind when he passed away last year in May, I knew that I would not be able to do it justice as a publisher without the help and support of Jonty’s last poetry publisher, Nick Mulgrew of uHlanga Press. I cannot thank Nick enough for embarking on this co-publication with me. We have been working together in all kinds of capacities since 2015, but this is the first time that uHlanga Press and Karavan Press are co-publishing a book, and what a special one it is. Beautifully written, tenderly honest, insightful and simply extraordinary, Dayspring is a literary gem.

Read an excerpt here: Johannesburg Review of Books

Join us for the launch on the 16th!

Gail Gilbride reviews Crooked Seeds by Karen Jennings

Karen Jennings has delivered another masterpiece! The compelling Deidre Van Deventer confronts her family’s dark past in this riveting novel about trauma, guilt, and entrapment. In her dismal abode in the drought-ravaged Cape Town of 2028, the protagonist receives a call from the South African police department. Her family home, reclaimed by the government, is now the scene of a criminal investigation. After decades underground the remains of bodies have been found on this property. Detectives interrogate Deidre about her missing brother’s links with a 1990’s pro-apartheid group, but she appears to know nothing about this.

What Deidre does know is that, because of her sibling, she was denied her dream life. Instead, she is left with an aging mother, and she’s dependent on government help and kind neighbours. Fresh evidence surfaces and detectives keep gently pressurising Deidre to give them anything at all that she might remember …

Jennings’s vivid, stark prose and visceral imagery secure her a place as one of our greatest writers.

I dare you to read this intense, unforgettable novel.

Gail Gilbride is the author of Under the African Sun and Cat Therapy.

Karavan Press title: Land | Lines by Shari Daya

No – listen – I carried on.
Even now, some days, the weight buckles my knees.

“Shari Daya’s poems bring out what she calls ‘the thrill of hot, soft, quiet lives’: beach holidays and household incense, the pains and pleasures of childhood and parenthood and the professional joys of geography, Indian Ocean migration, the anatomy of the cornea, and the special beauty of the Cederberg. Her language is serious, quiet, and sometimes spectacular.” – Imraan Coovadia

“Shari Daya’s Land | Lines is an exquisitely-crafted kaleidoscope of poetry and memoir. Daya’s text – a series of meditations on remembrance, parenting, identity, gardening, the wild freedoms of nature, the joys and dangers of childhood – glows. She brings a sense of wonder to the quotidian that invites the reader to glimpse at her life and, perhaps, see their own lives anew. I loved every gorgeous sentence and saw, as I read it, that rare, precious thing in literature: a Cape Town, both past and present, that I recognised.” – Nadia Davids

“Shari Daya’s debut collection is a tender and moving evocation of the complex intersections of family, ancestry and private spaces. Daya writes with quiet confidence. She cares deeply about every word and image, and this makes the reader care deeply too.” – Kobus Moolman

ISBN: 978-1-7764726-9-7

Publication date: July 2024

About the author:

SHARI DAYA is a geographer and poet from Cape Town. Her poetry and essays explore the intricate and entangled geographies of lineage, place and the body. Her work has appeared in the literary journals Obsidian, Stanzas, New Contrast and the anthologies Africa! My Africa! and I Wish I’d Said… Vol. 5: A Product of the AVBOB Poetry Project. She earned an MA in Creative Writing, with distinction, at the University of Cape Town in 2023.

Land | Lines is her debut poetry collection.

Karavan Press title: Dot to Dot by Lisa Tredoux

Face is a very faraway land that many of you might not have heard of before. Although the name will probably be strange to you, the goings-on there are all too familiar. As with most beautiful places, its inhabitants – the Freckolions and the Spots – are bitterly arguing over Face’s vast landscape.

One day an alien craft descends on Face and sends the Freckolions and Spots into panic. Is this another opponent to try and conquer their home, or is it the answer the Spots and Freckolions have been looking for?

ISBN: 978-1-7764726-1-1

Publication date: July 2024

Meet a few of the characters of Dot to Dot

Spot and Zit Zat

… and (my absolute favourite!) …

Meet the author …

LISA TREDOUX is a South African actress with a passion for storytelling across various mediums, making her literary debut. Through her enchanting children’s book, Lisa taps into the simplicity of childhood narratives, reminding adults of the clarity in communication found within these tales. With a heart for conveying meaningful messages, Lisa weaves a delightful world for young readers to explore and learn. Her mission? To teach kids the invaluable lessons of self-love and kindness towards others.

The original and the published book.

Lisa wrote, illustrated and put together the original Dot to Dot during the lockdown. The moment I saw the book, I knew it would become Karavan Press’s first publication for children (and all those who love meaningful, fun, illustrated storytelling). I look forward to sharing this delightful story with readers of all ages.

Steven Boykey Sidley reviews ‘Inside your body there are flowers’ by Diane Awerbuck

There is a commercial hierarchy in publishing which marks where money is most easily and quickly made at a given moment in the zeitgeist – the industry keeps a close watch on these trends. After all publishing companies need to stay in business. Perhaps even make a profit or two.

So we have forensic crime or romcom or up-lit or immigrant stories or sci-fi or light mystery or historical dramas or fantasy or erotica all battling for their moment in the sun. Which is often duly afforded them from time to time by the changing dictates of public taste.

But there are a few genres which, if they are lucky to be published at all, generally languish sad and neglected at the bottom of the revenue table and at the back of the bookstore. We all know which they are, because we so rarely buy them.

They are short stories and poetry.

I read short stories only occasionally. The most recent was Lauren Groff’s Florida and I remarked in a review that I posted at the time that a short story is it’s own microscope. Every word, every sentence, every phrase must count towards a 4 or 9 or 14 page plotlet. Every ounce of fat must be pared, only muscle must remain – lean, strong, compressed. Its fuel is its scarcity of on-page real estate.

And so, this collection by Diane Awerbuck. The difficulty in writing a cohesive review about short stories is often their spread; one cannot possibly cover each story in a collection. Even so, there are things to be said.

The first is that Awerbuck is an astonishingly good wordsmith, forging sentences and phrases dripping with allusion and dimensionality or just the music of finely wrought language. Part of joy in reading this book is to read a sentence, stop, savour, and go back and read that one sentence again, its effect amplified by the repetition.

This alone is worth the price of admission, but the stories themselves bear commentary. Some of the characters in the stories overlap and drag the reader through time. An insecure and barely post-pubescent teenager meeting a bunch of army boys on a train, [almost] losing her virginity some years later in another, sinking into the grief of the spurned lover in another, wrestling the certainty of a dread disease in another, communing with her late father long lost to suicide in another.

There are individual stand-alone stories too, an unlikely lust-soaked love story in 19th century Fish Hoek, a larger-than-life celebrity corpse on display in a funeral home and the kind attentions lavished on it by the mortuary make-up technician, a story of sin and redemption attending a death in a Karroo farmhouse.

Threading through this entire collection are commentaries around the big themes of a life closely examined – love, sex, death, meaning, family, self – each buried in stories that bring something new to these well-worn territories; a surprise (sometimes gentle, sometimes shocking) stalks every plot.

(There is the whiff of autobiography in many of the stories, some of which are borne out in the acknowledgements, which have the effect of wanting to have a wine-drenched dinner with the author to probe further.)

If you have not ever bought a short story collection, or have bought just a few, do yourself this favour and buy Inside your body there are flowers. And after you have finished this gorgeous outing spare a moment of gratitude for those publishers who bet the commercially impossible odds on books like these, simply just because it strikes them as the right thing to do (Karina Szczurek at Karavan Press in this case, others mentioned in Awerbuck’s acknowledgments).

First posted on GBAS & RAGBL.

The 2024 Sunday Times Literary Awards Fiction longlist

The 2024 Sunday Times Literary Awards longlists have been announced on Sunday, and the Fiction Prize longlist features four Karavan Press titles as well as one title we distribute locally:

Congratulations to Mike, Andrew, Sarah, Nick, Lethu and all other longlisted Authors!

FICTION PRIZE

This is the 21st year of the Sunday Times fiction prize. The criteria stipulate that the winning novel should be one of “rare imagination and style … a tale so compelling as to become an enduring landmark of contemporary fiction”.

JUDGES

Siphiwo Mahala – Chair

Mahala is an award-winning author, playwright and academic, with a PhD in English Literature. He is the author of the novel, When a Man Cries (2007), two short story collections, African Delights and Red Apple Dreams and Other Stories, and two critically acclaimed plays, The House of Truth and Bloke and His American Bantu. His latest book Can Themba: The Making and Breaking of the Intellectual Tsotsi (2022), won the Creative Non-Fiction Award at the SA Literary Awards. He is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Johannesburg, Senior Fellow at the Johannesburg Institute for Advanced Study and editor of Imbiza Journal for African Writing.

Michele Magwood

In her long career Magwood has worked in radio, magazines and television and for 20 years was the Books Editor of the Sunday Times. She is the winner of two Mondi awards and the SALA award for literary journalism. A sought-after interviewer at book festivals, she currently works as a writer and editor and assesses manuscripts for publishers. She writes a books column for Business Day Wanted magazine. Magwood has a BA Honours degree from UKZN.

Dr Alma-Nalisha Cele

Cele is an experienced doctor with a demonstrated history of working in the pharmaceutical & health care industry. She is skilled in clinical skills, quality patient care, analytical skills, communication, and medicine. She holds a Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery – MBBCH focused in Medicine from University of the Witwatersrand and a postgraduate diploma (cum laude) in medicine development at University of Stellenbosch. She is also the co-founder of The Cheeky Natives, a literary podcast primarily focused on the review, curatorship and archiving of black literature. In 2019, she was named one of the Mandela Washington Fellows to undertake a prestigious fellowship in the United States. She was also named one of the Mail & Guardian’s top 200 Young South Africans in 2019.

Love Books launch of BAD LUCK PENNY by Amy Heydenrych

Next week, Karavan Press authors and readers are moving into Love Books for two days. We are launching Anna Stroud’s Who Looks Inside on 19 June, and then Amy Heydenrych‘s beautiful Bad Luck Penny the next day, on 20 June. Amy will be in conversation with Gail Schimmel. Please do not forget to RSVP. Sadly, you will have to go home to sleep between the two events, but we hope to see you there for both occasions!

About the book:

In the wake of her beloved grandfather’s death, Lou and her family gather at their coastal family home for a long-awaited family reunion. The windswept and wild surroundings remind Lou of who she was before being a mother, a wife, and a professional failure. They bring back memories of Michael, her toxic first love and, according to the family, her ‘bad luck penny’. A shocking crisis in the country disrupts the funeral arrangements and forces the family together for longer than planned. As secrets rise to the surface, the threads of Lou’s life unravel and she faces a difficult choice – after all, it’s only a bad luck penny if you pick it up.

Love Books launch of WHO LOOKS INSIDE by Anna Stroud

Dear Readers of Joburg, 
The super-talented Anna Stroud is launching her stunning debut novel, Who Looks Inside, at Love Books on 19 June 2024. She will be in conversation with Michael Boyd, the author of The Weight of Shade.
Please join them for this celebration!
Literary love,
Karavan Press

PS Do not forget to RSVP.

About the book:

The news of her mother’s death pulls Hannah back from South Korea to her childhood home in the Karoo where she discovers that she has never escaped her abusive father and passive mother. That, in fact, she has been there all along, baking bread and raising a son whose father might be a local farmer she is having an affair with. Her world unravels as she struggles to separate the life she has built for herself from the one she survived. Unsettling, eerie and evocative, Who Looks Inside explores themes of childhood trauma in a working-class Afrikaans family.

“Poetic, atmospheric and haunting—Who Looks Inside is an intricate and compelling exploration of family trauma, small-town secrets and the decisions that seal our destinies.” — JENNIFER MALEC

Pagecast at Kingsmead Book Fair 2024: Amy Heydenrych

In this captivating discussion, Pagecast host Nompumelelo Mgidlana engages in a thought-provoking conversation with Amy Heydenrych, the talented author behind the thrillers Shame on You and The Pact, and co-author of Chasing Marian. Her latest novel, Bad Luck Penny, was released by Karavan Press in April and is another thrilling read.

Join Nompumelelo and Amy as they delve into Amy’s literary journey and explore her latest release, Bad Luck Penny. Amy shares her insights on what makes stories literary, a topic she discussed on one of her panels at this year’s Kingsmead Book Fair. They also discuss the significance of festivals like Kingsmead for authors and the local literary community.

Don’t miss this enlightening episode as it uncovers the gripping narratives and creative process behind Amy’s work.

The episode is live and can be found here:

Online | Spotify | Apple Podcast

Enjoy!

DAYSPRING, a memoir by C. J. Driver, edited by J. M. Coetzee

Karavan Press and uHlanga are proud to announce the release of Dayspring, a memoir by the renowned South African-English poet and novelist C. J. Driver, edited and with a foreword by Nobel Prize-winning author J. M. Coetzee. The book releases on 1 July 2024 in South Africa.

Dayspring is a recollection of Driver’s South African youth – his childhood as a reverend’s son in Kroonstad and Grahamstown-Makhanda preceding his extraordinary student years at the University of Cape Town, during which he edited the student newspaper Varsity and became enmeshed in radical student politics.

As president of the anti-apartheid National Union of South African Students, Driver was detained by the security police, tortured and imprisoned in solitary confinement in Cape Town. Even after fleeing to England, Driver remained a bête-noire for the apartheid authorities, with ex-president B. J. Vorster keeping personal notes on Driver’s activities.

But all that comes later in his life. Dayspring is a tender and deeply personal book, offering an intimate picture of a family coming to terms with the losses of the Second World War. It is the story of a father and son recognising their differing beliefs, and of a young man navigating the joys and pitfalls of romance. As a direct descendant of the 1820 Settlers, Driver examines the contradictory beliefs and institutions of the South Africa he grew up in – particularly its boarding schools – with unique insight and humour.

Throughout the reader discovers the moments of inspiration, failure and literary exchange that were crucial to the development of Driver’s fiction, celebrated internationally during his lifetime, as well as his poetry, which, even before his death in 2023, has been lauded as one of the most significant bodies of work by a modern South African poet.

In Dayspring, we are witness to the formation of a sensitive, incisive intellect; someone who did not simply engage with the world through literature, but faced up to it, too. This is an extraordinary book. 

  • Publishers: Karavan Press and uHlanga
  • ISBN: 978-1-7764726-3-5
  • Releases 1 July 2024 in South Africa ONLY
  • Foreword by J. M. Coetzee; afterword by Dominic Driver, Dax Driver and Tamlyn Driver
  • Includes an appendix of poems and photographs