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 

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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.

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

24 May: Karavan Press at the KBF

The literary festival season continues and we are delighted to announce that the following Karavan Press authors will be participating in the Kingsmead Book Fair this year:

09:30-10:00 DOT TO DOT | The Book Room

Meet the Freckolions and the Spots who are bitterly arguing over Face’s vast landscape. Then one day an alien craft descends on Face and sends the Freckolions and Spots into panic! SA actress Lisa Trudoux introduces her first charming and quirky children’s book Dot To Dot which teaches kids the invaluable lessons of self-love and kindness towards others in the most enchanting way.

09:30-10:30 WRITING OUR PAIN: Contending with traumatic narratives | Chapel

Sewela Langeni (Making Friends with Feelings) provides a safe space for Jeffrey Rakabe (Led by Shepherds) and Thobeka Yose (In Silence My Heart Speaks) to chat about transferring pain to the page.

11:00-12:00 PRETTY PROTAGONISTS: Crafting heroines with humanity | Mackenzie 1

Amy Heydenrych (Chasing Marian) examines the creation of the powerful women at the centre of the works of Zukiswa Wanner (Love Marry Kill), Michelle Kekana (The Fragile Mental Health of Strong Women) and Qarnita Loxton (What’s Wrong with June?).

12:30-13:30 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: People and place in historical fiction | Lange Hall

Penny Haw (Follow Me To Africa: A Novel), Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu (The Creation of Half-Broken People) and Louisa Treger (The Paris Muse) discuss facets of historical fiction – beyond the period in which it’s set – that really matter with Michael Boyd (Weight of Shade).

12:30-13:30 Life is the greatest teacher: Writing from experience | Music Centre

Merle Levin (World According to Merle: Memoir of a Deliciously Daring Granny), Costa Ayiotis (Matriarchs, Meze and the Evil Eye: A Memoir) and Glenn Orsmond (Crash and Burn: A CEO’s Crazy Adventures in the SA Airline Industry) tell Karina Szczurek (Karavan Press) about their weird uncles and the strange lady from the office.

14:30-15:30 LITERARY FITION VERSUS GENRE FICTION: What makes a book ‘literary’? | Chapel

Peter-Adrian Altini (Salt Water Pool Boy) and Charl-Pierre Naudé (The Equality of Shadows) discuss style and complexity with Craig Higginson (The Ghost of Sam Webster).

16:00-17:00 Navigating our life stories: Lessons learned and unlearned | Lange Hall

Khaya Dlanga (Life is Like That Sometimes) and Gavin Evans (Son of a Preacher Man) tell Anna Stroud (Who Looks Inside) about what they have learned while writing about themselves.

16:00-17:00 Stretching the imagination: Pushing boundaries in storytelling | Mackenzie 3

Onke Mazibuko (Canary) follows Nick Clelland (Good Hope), Siya Khumalo (The Queer Book of Revelation) and Sam Wilson (The First Murder on Mars) into the detailed, fresh worlds of their books.

16:00-17:00 Publish or perish: Women in the publishing industry | Chapel

Queen bees Karina Szczurek (Karavan Press), Melinda Ferguson (Melinda Ferguson Books) and Zukiswa Wanner (Paivapo Publishing) underline the importance of curating stories from a feminine perspective with Sewela Langeni (Book Circle Capital).

Full programme: KBF 2025

Get your KBF tickets here: Webtickets

Karavan Press at the HSS Awards 2025

The National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences hosted its annual HSS Awards gala last night and we are thrilled to announce that four Karavan Press titles were recognised at the Awards. Congratulations to Anna Stroud, Alex Latimer, Shari Daya and Nick Clelland on your wonderful achievements!

SHORTLISTED TITLES

Land | Lines, Shari Daya in the Best Poetry sub-category.

Good Hope, Nick Clelland in the Best Fiction Novel sub-category.

WINNING TITLES

Who Looks Inside, Anna Stroud in the Best Fiction Emerging Author sub-category.

Love Stories for Ghosts, Alex Latimer in the Best Fiction Short Stories sub-category.

Congratulations to all nominated and winning authors!

Thank you to all who make the HSS Awards possible!

Karavan Press Literary Festival 2025

We are delighted to announce that the fourth KARAVAN PRESS LITERARY FESTIVAL is going to take place on Saturday, 12 April 2025, at the wonderful South African Centre for the Netherlands and FlandersSASNEV 4 Central Square, Pinelands, Cape Town, 7405. Thank you to Eureka Barnard and the Staff of SASNEV for hosting us!

As part of the festival, Penny Haw, winner of the 2024 Philida Literary Award, will deliver the André Brink Memorial Lecture – 6 February 2025 was the 10th anniversary of André’s death, and on 29 May 2025, he would have turned 90. We will remember and celebrate together!

Also as part of the festival, Qarnita Loxton and Amy Heydenrych are offering a Creative Writing Workshop. For all details, please see below.

EVENT 1 09:30-10:15  LIFE AND LAUGHTER

Diane Awerbuck, Lisa Tredoux and Gail Gilbride speak to Nick Clelland about how to use humour in literature across the genres to address important themes that are not necessarily always funny.

EVENT 2 10:30-11:15  FINDING ONESELF

Sarah Isaacs, Anna Stroud, Kharys Ateh Laue and Lester Walbrugh talk to John Maytham about their young characters’ search for who they are and how they want to be in the world when the world is unwilling to cooperate.

COFFEE / TEA BREAK

EVENT 3 12:00-12:45  SECOND CHANCES

“Sometimes the only thing you can do to change is to leave.” (Qarnita Loxton)

Amy Heydenrych, Stephen Symons & Alex Latimer talk to Karina M. Szczurek about their characters’ opportunities for change.

EVENT 4 13:00-13:45 

ANDRÉ BRINK MEMORIAL LECTURE

“Influences and Legacies” – PENNY HAW, winner of the 2024 Philida Literary Award

FREE ENTRY TO ALL EVENTS AT SASNEV!

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WORKSHOP 15:30-17:30

6 Banksia Road, Rosebank, 7700 Cape Town

(Please note change of venue for the workshop!)

OPENING THE DOOR TO YOUR STORY 

Join authors and collaborators – QARNITA LOXTON and AMY HEYDENRYCH – for an intimate, nurturing creative writing workshop. Get to the heart of your story, uncover the theme of your writing project and work through any potential blocks to your creative writing process in a quiet, encouraging setting.

Snacks and drinks will be served.

The workshop is open to writers of all levels, including beginners. Only 10 spots available. Please book early to avoid disappointment.

To book your spot for the workshop, please contact Karina: karavanpressfestival@outlook.com

WORKSHOP FEE R300

Books will be available for sale at great prices throughout the festival!

Karavan Press at the Woordfees

Anna Stroud, Nick Clelland and Beatrice Willoughby will be participating in this year’s Woordfees:

TUESDAY, 1 October, 11:30, SU Museum Annex

A Tale of Two Cities

The Johannesburg writer Anna Stroud’s first novel, Who Looks Inside, is about family trauma and small town secrets, and stretches from South Korea to the Karoo, and finally comes to an end in Johannesburg. Nick Clelland’s novel Good Hope is set in a dystopian future where the Western Cape is an independent country. Those in power will sweep anything under the rug to maintain the illusion of a well-functioning state and booming economy. Publisher Jaco Adriaanse facilitates this meeting of North and South.

SATURDAY, 5 October, 18:00, EasyEquities Book Tent

Met ’n bietjie hulp van my vriende

Poets often feel obliged to write about love, but perhaps it is time to wax lyrical about the often more reliable and long-lasting love between friends instead. Invited poets bring two verses each about friendship. Is friendship indeed one soul in two bodies, or simply the one soul that will be there when your world falls apart? Bring your best friend and discover fresh insights into what makes your bond so special.

With Loftus Marais, Jolyn Phillips, André le Roux, Jaco Barnard-Naudé, Lynthia Julius, Danie Marais and Beatrice Willoughby.

Full programme: WOORDFEES 2024

What readers say about BAD LUCK PENNY by Amy Heydenrych

“This novel touched me in surprising and unexpected ways. We all know Amy Heydenrych can write, but Bad Luck Penny takes her body of work to new and exciting heights. By telling the intimate, personal story of one family grappling with the aftermath of COVID, the novel evokes themes of generational trauma, broken hearts and shattered dreams. Yet her wry and witty writing style makes it a highly entertaining read. What captured me most was Lou’s story, with which, without giving too much away, many South African women can identify.” – Anna Stroud, author of Who Looks Inside

Bad Luck Penny by Amy Heydenrych is a stunning book. It’s going to win all the literary awards. The writing is beautiful, introspective and melancholic. I loved reading this book slowly, so I could fully appreciate the beautiful writing … it was delicious. A book about family, grief, trauma, making mistakes and dealing with a mid-life crisis all set in an unmistakably South African context. Definitely my book of the year so far!” – Catherine Jarvis, YA author

“A heartwarming family drama – deliciously and dangerously nostalgic.” – Gail Schimmel, author of, among others, Never Tell a Lie, Little Secrets, and most recently, The Finish Line

“The most beautiful family story I have read in a long time.” – Anna Vaulina, reader

“One of my favourite niche genres is the story of the female protagonist who returns to her childhood holiday home as an adult. These books are often set in America (think the Hamptons and Martha’s Vineyard) or the UK (the Cornish coast). The protagonist unearths family secrets and quite often rekindles – for good or for ill – her relationship with the old flame who never left. Bad Luck Penny belongs firmly in this genre, but is set – delightfully enough – in False Bay, near Simon’s Town. Lou returns to her grandparents’ home with her husband and child in tow, to celebrate the life of her beloved late grandfather. She is also determined to revitalise her flagging literary career by telling her grandmother’s story while she is still alive. The Australian branch of the family is there too with their tone-deaf expat comments that are sure to set her teeth on edge. Also lurking in the village is that old flame, whose hotness burns as high as ever. The novel also reckons with some aspects of our recent apartheid and post-apartheid past. A lovely read! IYL The Paper Palace by Miranda Cowley Heller.” – Fiona Snyckers, author of, among others, Now Following You, Lacuna, and most recently, The Hidden

“My book of the month … is Amy Heydenrych’s (aka Amy Johnstone’s) Bad Luck Penny. It’s set in Scarborough in the Cape during the time of Covid and the July riots but also deals with the protag’s gran’s story from when she was young. It’s poignant and funny and the family dynamics in the book are so gorgeously written, I feel like it might just be Amy’s best book yet. My favourite line (amongst many favourites) ‘Her love language was martyrdom’. Fam, I snorted my coffee.” – Pamela Power, author of, among others, Ms Conception, Things Unseen, and most recently, The Sick Room

Bad Luck Penny adeptly balances the hilarious with the heartfelt in its exploration of midlife, motherhood and a family in crisis. A deeply honest and compassionate story about a woman looking to the future while wrestling with her past.” – Hayley Chewins, author of The Turnaway Girls and the upcoming I Am the Swarm

“An epic tale of family, storytelling at its very best.” – Qarnita Loxton, author of the Being Series and most recently, What’s Wrong with June

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

Karavan Press at the Kingsmead Book Fair 2024

We are all looking forward to the next Kingsmead Book Fair, taking place at Kingsmead College on Saturday, 25 May 2024. Hope to see you there!

09:30-10:30 | Mackenzie 2

Dawn Garisch (What Remains) confirms, with Diane Awerbuck (Inside your body there are flowers), Frankie Murrey (Everyone Dies: A Series), Alex Latimer (Love Stories for Ghosts), and Barbara Ludman (Moving On), that brevity is the soul of wit. And drama. And romance.

09:30-10:30 | Mackenzie 3

Fiona Snyckers (The Hidden) asks Owen Salmon (A Weakness to Die For) and Andrew Brown (The Bitterness of Olives) to unpack the male gaze in storytelling.

12:30 – 13:30 | Music Centre
Georgina Geddes asks Alistair Mackay (The Child), Craig Higginson (The Ghost of Sam Webster), Shubnum Khan (The Lost Love of Akbar Manzil) and Amy Heydenrych (Bad Luck Penny) what it is that makes stories ‘literary’.

12:30 – 13:30 | Chapel

Diane Awerbuck (Inside your body there are flowers) answers the call of nature with Adam Welz (The End of Eden), and Nick Norman (The Woodpecker Mystery: The Inevitability of the Improbable).

12:30 – 13:30 | Mornington

Kate Sidley (Katie Gayle – Julia Bird Mysteries) asks Saaleha Bhamjee (Home Scar), Anna Stroud (Who Looks Inside) and Janine Jellars (When the Filter Fades) what it takes to really own your writing space as a woman.

14:30 – 15:30 | Mornington
Amy Heydenrych (Chasing Marian, Bad Luck Penny) sees if she can find a reason why the characters created by Ashling McCarthy (Down at Jika Jika Tavern), Marina Auer (Double Edged), Femi Kayode (Gaslight) and Natalie Conyer (Present Tense) need to worry about their welfare.

16:00 – 17:00 | Lange Hall
Police reservist Andrew Brown (The Bitterness of Olives) guides Daniel Steyn (The Thabo Bester Story), Naledi Shange (Killer Cop – The Rosemary Ndlovu Story), Karl Kemp (Why We Kill: Mob Justice and the New Vigilantism in South Africa) and Nechama Brodie (Domestic Terror) into the minds of murderers both famous and anonymous.

16:00 – 17:00 | Music Centre

Alex Latimer (Love Stories for Ghosts) discovers if the future is fantastic or frightening with Mandla Moyo (The Fallen Angel), Sarah M Naidoo (A Remedy for Death), Alistair Mackay (The Child) and Babette Gallard (Future Imperfect).

Full programme:

KBF 2024

Tickets:

Webtickets