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.
We are delighted to announce that Captive: New Short Fiction from Africa, edited by Helen Moffett and Rachel Zadok, is now available in SA from Karavan Press. First published in the US by Catalyst Press, the new Short Story Day Africa anthology is a literary feast of note.
“What a wonderful addition to the literary landscape, what a delectable survey of the breadth, and indeed depth, of the African literary imaginary.” Idza Luhumyo, 2022 Caine Prize Winner
Contributors
Salma Yusuf | Sola Njoku | Aba Abison | Kabubu Mutua | Emily Perdigo | Doreen Anyango | Khumbo Mahone | Moso Sematlane | N. A. Dawn | Josephine Sokan | Zanta Nkumane
From Short Story Day Africa, eleven writers from Africa and the African diaspora explore the identities that connect us, the obsessions that bewitch us, and the self-delusions that drive us apart. Passion and apathy, creation and destruction, honesty and deception – the blurred lines between these forces are fundamental to the human condition. In three parts, the writers investigate these liminal spaces and rail against the boxes in which others seek to confine them, as writers, as Africans, and as humans. Journey from the fantastical Heaven’s Mouth where time stands still, to a London bus where a neurodiverse woman steals love to the songs of Tom Jones … flip the page to Ghana to examine a fertility fetish, or a post-apocalyptic Lesotho where sentient AI uses our emotions against us … visit the deceptively beautiful islands off the Tanzanian coast, where the ocean is always hungry, and women pay the price. Captive is a riot of imagination, a collision of worlds, and a testament to the shape-shifting nature of the soul.
“The calibre of stories is unsurprising given the authors involved, and the scholarly/editorial skills of editors Helen Moffett and Rachel Zadok … This anthology offers Afrocentric fiction, stories beautifully canvassed and etched out with the finest strokes that sometimes coat stories within stories.” Eugene M. Bacon, Locus Magazine
Introduction
The thirty-three stories contained in this collection are the result of a mentorship curriculum we, with our usual sense of the ridiculous, titled the SSDA Inkubator. The idea for a story incubator was seeded seven years ago in another Short Story Day Africa (SSDA) initiative, a series of bi-weekly flash fiction events held on social media. The popularity of these events highlighted a need within the African writing community for spaces where writers could develop work towards publication. Few such spaces exist on the continent. Of the twenty-two top-ranked universities in Africa for creative writing courses, fifteen are in South Africa (with the top eleven on the list also in South Africa), three are in Nigeria, two are in Ghana, and Mozambique and Zimbabwe each have one. This means that African writers either need to go abroad to further their creative writing ambitions, or create spaces for themselves. The SSDA Inkubator is our endeavour to create such a space, and the twelve writers we selected for the pilot project, run in conjunction with Laxfield Literary Associates and supported by a grant from the British Council, were chosen because their voices were original and diverse, and the messages contained within their submissions powerful enough to one day cause ripples in the zeitgeist. The challenge for the writers when submitting their proposals was that they only had a maximum of one thousand words of prose to convince us they had the raw talent to deliver. SSDA has spent years honing our mission to subvert, reimagine and reclaim the literary landscape for writers from Africa. We have done this by ensuring that we develop and publish a diverse range of voices, looking beyond the expected and polished to the raw, sometimes unhoned, edge that makes a writer’s voice sing. The SSDA Inkubator is by far our most successful development programme in this regard. We found talented writers from the African continent and diaspora and took them on a journey from story seed to final publication, exposing them, via a series of workshops, to the wisdom, techniques and craft of six brilliant African writers and editors, and one British literary agent with her eyes focused on the continent’s literary talent pool. Captive is the result. Divided into three themed parts chosen by the writers as a community, these stories explore some of our most pressing concerns: love, migration, ambition, motherhood, ageing, culture, folklore, AI, mental health, fairytales and possible futures … These are more than stories. In their words these eleven Inkubator Fellows have built bridges across imagined borders, knotted stitches to mend divisions, and written a balm for our fractured global society. We hope you read them with delight, and, after turning the final page, approach your fellows with greater empathy. Rachel Zadok Managing Editor, Short Story Day Africa
Following the enormous success of last year’s “Surf’s Up” reading by local surfer-authors-poets, Salon Hecate at the Noordhoek Art Point Gallery is returning with another fabulous line-up of surf literature the first Tuesday evening in June. We’ll be launching the re-issue of Byron Loker’s short story collection, New Swell, and getting a teaser taste of his brand-new collection, Heavy Water, forthcoming from Karavan Press. Byron is one of “Nature’s gentlemen”, a surfer who never drops in and shares not only the backline, but the limelight. He asked if others could get on board too, so … check out the entire line-up here:
Please join us at the Noordhoek Art Point Gallery on 4 June, 5.30 for 6. Entrance is free, but PLEASE RSVP by 1 June at the latest. Otherwise we run the risk *gasp* of running out of wine. Small snacks provided.
Got a question about this event or interested in a particular piece you’ve seen at Noordhoek Art Point? Get in touch at info@noordhoekartpoint.co.za or call 0835642493.
Last night, writers, readers and other creatives descended on Noordhoek Art Point to celebrate Salon Hecate’s 1st Birthday. It has been a year of inspiring artistic gatherings. Thank you to Helen Moffett and the Art Point team for everything that you are doing for the community! We all look forward to many more years of Salon Hecate.
Earlier this year, the McGregor Poetry Festival announced a hiatus for a year. The organisers are taking a well-deserved break. The Red Wheelbarrow Poetry Collective and the Rosebank Writers’ Circle decided to step into the breach and organised a once-off event to celebrate poetry at a day-long poetry festival here in Cape Town. Please join us for these exciting poetry panels, taking place at two venues, the Bertha House and Youngblood-Africa, on 4 November 2023.
Events are free! Books will be on sale throughout the day.
SALON HECATE was launched Noordhoek Art Point last night. Art lovers from across the peninsula gathered to celebrate the new space which will welcome readings, book signings and discussions throughout 2023 and beyond.
Thank you to the gallery and Helen Moffett for welcoming writers into this exciting place of co-existence between the visual arts and literature.
Melissa A. Volker and Stephen Symons, among others, read from their works and I read from one of the stories included in Let It Fall Where It Will by Lester Walbrugh because Lester was baking Grabouw Bread between insane bouts of loadshedding and could not make it to the launch (it was an honour to step into his literary shoes for a few minutes).
Please join us for the second Karavan Press Literary Festival on Saturday, 3 December 2022, at Karavan Press’s headquarters (6 Banksia Road, Rosebank, Cape Town). Ticket numbers are limited, so please book early to avoid disappointment. Let’s talk books again!
12 March 2020: PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED DUE TO CONCERNS ABOUT THE SPREAD OF COVID-19.
Karavan Press author Dawn Garisch will be participating in this year’s Jewish Literary Festival (JLF). The festival is taking place on 15 March 2020 at the Gardens Community Centre in Cape Town, home to the iconic Jacob Gitlin Library, SA Jewish Museum and Cape Town Holocaust Centre.
Dawn’s event will take place at 10am at the venue “ISRAEL ABRAHAMS 2“.
Writing Jewish characters — when you’re not Jewish: Where angels fear to tread…
Helen Moffett, Qarnita Loxton and Dawn Garisch talk to Karina Szczurek.
This is the third edition of the bi-annual Jewish Literary Festival, a one-day event for lovers of literature and Jewish life. Between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Sunday, 15 March 2020, readers can engage with more than 70 wordsmiths, poets, journalists, filmmakers and educators over more than 40 sessions. The presenters all have some Jewish connection, are engaged with subjects of Jewish interest or have a way with words and, with multiple sessions running simultaneously throughout the day, the organisers offer genres that cover fiction, sport, food, memoir, politics, journalism, the arts and more – a wide choice to suit all tastes. It is a literary feast of note. Don’t miss it! Tickets sell out quickly, so do not hesitate to book yours here: Quicket.