Karavan Press title: A Collection of Gaps by Frankie Murrey

There’s this moon in the sky. And I want to say – not now,
moon, I’ve got work to do. But you know the moon. She never
listens. So I sit and watch her for a while. Admire those curves.
Whisper secrets and cigarette smoke love.

from ‘Letter to the Night’

A COLLECTION OF GAPS

by FRANKIE MURREY

ISBN (Box Edition): 978-1-0370-9173-5

Publication date: 12 August 2025

FRANKIE MURREY worked in the book retail sector for many years before becoming the coordinator of Open Book Festival, which takes place every year in early September in Cape Town. In 2015, her work was awarded the Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. She resigned from Open Book Festival at the end of 2019 and started her own company, FM Project Management. Through this company, she has since been curating or managing creative events and projects that align with her interests. She also returned to Open Book in 2022, a space she’d missed intensely. She won the HSS Award for Best Emerging Author in the Fiction Category for her authorial debut, Everyone Dies, in 2024. A Collection of Gaps is her second volume of stories and will be first published in a special, limited edition as a box containing stories and other treasures. 

Salon Hecate at Noordhoek Art Point

Salon Hecate | 5 August, Noorhoek Art Point Gallery

We still have cold and wet months ahead, but it feels like winter might be on the wane. That means it’s time for the annual Nurture and Nourish Salon! Which will take place on Tuesday evening, 5 August. And although the way Women’s Month is marketed is problematic, August does turn our thoughts to the human qualities often assigned as “natural” to women — nurturing, co-operation, love in action — and it’s worth celebrating these.

The focus of the Salon will be on poetry: confirmed readers of words of beauty and comfort include poet, photographer, rower and bassonist Liesl Jobson; storyteller, singer and memorist Philippa Kabali-Kagwa; publisher extraordinaire Karina Szczurek; and chronicler of the Deep South, Diane Awerbuck. Fantasy fundi Nerine Dorman will give us a taste of none other than Tolkein’s writings on food, and there’ll be a short story featuring the humble sweet potato and a magical soup.

And yes, there will be homemade soup (vegan)! Paper cups will be provided, but if you remember, please bring your travel mug and a spoon.

This will be a time for warmth and closeness, for beautiful words, tastes and images. We are bitterly mindful of those suffering hunger, thirst and cold at present; this Salon will present a chance to appreciate and give thanks for our many comforts, including those supplied by friends, art, poetry, fynbos and beaches close by; the simple luxuries of boiling a kettle for a hot drink and food in the pantry.

If you are able, it would be much appreciated if you could bring along a tin of food, a jar of jam, spread or peanut butter, or a packet of seasoning or similar to pop into a box to donate to My Father’s House, which feeds two thousand vulnerable and unsheltered adults and children. Visit their website here for more information: https://www.myfathershouse.org.za/

Time: 5.30 for 6, to end at 7pm.

Attendance is free, with soup and wine/juice served. Donations are welcome, but absolutely not obligatory. Vegetarians/vegans are always catered for.

The 2025 Sunday Times Literary Awards longlists announced

The Sunday Times Literary Awards longlists have been announced and we are delighted that they feature five Karavan Press titles. Congratulations to all longlisted authors!

Thank you to all who make these awards possible!

Mountains of gratitude to Karavan Press authors on the lists:

FICTION
Crooked Seeds by Karen Jennings (co-published with Holland House Books)
Who Looks Inside by Anna Stroud
Good Hope by Nick Clelland

NON-FICTION
In Silence My Heart Speaks by Thobeka Yose
Dayspring by C. J. Driver (co-published with uHlanga Press)

For all details, see: Sunday Times Literary Awards

CANEX PRIZE FOR PUBLISHING IN AFRICA LONGLIST features IN SILENCE MY HEART SPEAKS by THOBEKA YOSE

To say that we are thrilled would be the understatement of the year … In Silence My Heart Speaks by Thobeka Yose (Karavan Press, 2024) is among the longlisted titles for the CANEX Prize for Publishing in Africa.

Congratulations to all other publishers and books! We are honoured and proud to feature on this wonderful list.

Congratulations, Thobeka! Literary love and gratitude to you! Thank you for publishing your brave and inspiring story with Karavan Press.

Shift from Storyteller to Story Seller with Cathy Kelly and the Life Righting Collective

Are you an author about to send your book out into the world? Does the thought of marketing make you cringe?

Then this two-hour online interactive workshop – Shift from Storyteller to Story Seller – is for you. Reframe ‘marketing’ from a blush-worthy grind to an enthusiastic and energised adventure. 

Cathy Kelly, author of Boiling a Frog Slowly, is thrilled to offer it as part of the Life Righting Collective Writer’s Way Series 2. 

This workshop will help you reignite your passion for your story by showing you three practical steps to reimagine your story’s narrative power and find your readers. 

More info: Life Righting Collective

WRITING SHORT with Kerry Hammerton and the Life Righting Collective

Sometimes we have a personal story we want to tell but it feels too large or too overwhelming. What would it mean if you wrote that story as a piece of flash? Join writer and writing facilitator Kerry Hammerton to explore the art of writing flash creative non-fiction/memoir and fiction, or writing short. We will read interesting examples of flash and use them as a stepping stone to generate writing. The workshop will be interactive with a number of exercises and creative ways of exploring writing ideas. You will leave with a number of pieces of writing that you can edit and incorporate into a larger piece of work.

“Writing is a mode of reading is a mode of writing is a mode of thinking is a mode of feeling.” Lance Olsen

For more details see: Life Righting Collective

Poetry Evening next to the fireplace with Sarah Frost, Chantal Stewart and Lucienne Argent

Background photo fragment: Joël de Vriend | Unsplash

Dear Poetry Lovers,

Please join us for an evening of poetry next to the fireplace with Sarah Frost, Chantal Stewart and Lucienne Argent.

Sarah, who recently published her second collection of poetry with Karavan Press – River Fugue – is based in Durban, but she is visiting Cape Town towards the end of the month, and we are using this wonderful opportunity to spend an evening in her company. Together with Chantal Stewart, author of the award-winning novel The Veil of Maya who will be publishing her debut poetry collection with Karavan Press later this year, Let’s Be Legends, and Lucienne Argent, whose debut, Self-Portrait of a Guava, has been warming reader’s hearts since its publication in December last year, Sarah will be in conversation with Karina M. Szczurek, and all three poets will read from their collections. We will have a lovely fire, snacks and wine will be served, and books will be on sale. Not to be missed!

Limited space. Please RSVP as soon as possible to avoid disappointment: RSVP

We look forward to seeing you on the 31st!

Open Book Festival needs us!

Dear Literature Lovers,

The Open Book Festival has just put out a call for donations:

Please consider donating to the Open Book Festival.

Many organisations face funding crises right now and we unfortunately find ourselves in that position. We have been partly reliant on support from different levels of Government since the inception of Open Book, and there is still, so close to this year’s September festival, no clarity about the applications we have made to the Western Cape or National Government.

Your investment in the festival will not bring you dividends or shares, but what it will bring is the knowledge that the festival that you love and in whose value you believe will continue to exist.

For years we have spoken about our belief that Open Book is not owned by us – it is owned by all those who contribute to making it an inclusive, vibrant festival that consists of incredibly important and difficult conversations and serves to highlight some of the fantastic writing coming out of South Africa (and beyond). 

If you see value in Open Book, please consider contributing.

Questions you may have:

How much money does the Festival need?

R500 000

What happens if the festival doesn’t raise the money?

The festival will still go ahead, but we will have to borrow money to ensure that all our participants get paid. Longer term, the consequences are far more troubling. Borrowing money is not sustainable, and Open Book will then likely not survive beyond this year.

What happens if the Government funding does come through at the last minute?

If we raise our target and our proposals for funding are approved at the last minute, the money will be used for next year’s festival.

Is there anything else we can do to help?

If you have contacts to potential sponsors, please put us in touch – email introductions, meetings or whatever else makes sense. As government funding becomes increasingly difficult to access, it becomes even more crucial for the Arts Sector to be able to build partnerships with corporate entities.

It’s worth noting that sponsorships can also be in-kind, but currently we are in vital need of ‘paper money’.

If you have any other questions, please email either Mervyn or Frankie.

Final words from the Open Book team

Since 2011, we have been curating a festival that speaks to our love for the work of South African (and other) writers, as well as our commitment to seeing the literary landscape in this country transform. It has been a space where we have been privileged to create inclusive, interesting, entertaining and meaningful events that are part of much broader conversations. We have witnessed friendships being made, work being created and published because of new connections, and have come to think of so many of you as family. We are heartbroken that the continued existence of Open Book feels so tenuous. Please help if you can.

Mervyn, Frankie and the Open Book Team

DONATE TO SUPPORT THE OPEN BOOK FESTIVAL