
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










Griefseed by Malika Lueen Ndlovu to be launched in Durban
Please join us for the Durban launch of Griefseed!

Malika Lueen Ndlovu at The Commons
Malika Lueen Ndlovu is back in town next week and will be in conversation with Pregs Govender at The Commons in Muizenberg for the launch of her Griefseed. Please join us for this wonderful occasion on Wednesday, 21 May 2025, 7 for 7:30PM! Not to be missed! RSVP: Karavan Press

16-18 May: Karavan Press at the FLF 2025
The FLF is just around the corner and we are looking forward to another unforgettable bookish experience. Please join the following Karavan Press authors and Friends for a series of exciting events and workshops throughout the festival weekend:







Friday, 16 May




Saturday, 17 May






Full programme:
FLF 2025






Love Books launch of Malika Lueen Ndlovu’s Griefseed
Please join us for this special occasion! Malika will be in conversation with Makhosazana Xaba.

Griefseed by Malika Lueen Ndlovu to be launched at EB Cavendish
Please join us for the launch of Malika Lueen Ndlovu‘s Griefseed on Tuesday, 11 February 2025, at Exclusive Books Cavendish. Malika will be in conversation with Barbara Boswell.

RSVP: EB Cavendish
Karavan Press title: Griefseed by Malika Lueen Ndlovu

ABOUT THE BOOK
Griefseed is a gift, an offering from the pen of Malika Ndlovu that seeks to transform the ways we think about and process grief. Multidisciplinary in scope, the text includes poems, personal essays, images, and reflections on grief that punctuate the life story of the poet, offered here as medicine. These creative pieces function as both a window onto an individual woman’s life as she has journeyed with, through and beyond grief; as well as a mirror, inviting the reader to see their own lives and losses reflected within Ndlovu’s. This invitation to sit with grief, hold it, look it in the eye, and tend to it, is also an invocation to consider multigenerational relationships – how grief cements our relationships to the past, to ancestors, to descendants. To note where grief echoes along kinship lines, spreading itself throughout the branches of family trees. How centuries of grief from our grandmothers and grandfathers lodge themselves in our own bodies, crying out for release, relief and processing. If we dare to take up this visceral knowing, grief can transform us, becoming a generative site for renewal, rethinking, recasting. Ndlovu’s words are a balm. She writes in community with sisters, ancestors, children, grandchildren and spirit guides from a beyond to which we are all connected, and to which her work creates pathways. Her work and words heal. Accept the offering. Within the seed of grief lies transformation, transmutation; a settling into the knowledge of the connectedness and oneness of all.
— BARBARA BOSWELL, author of The Comrade’s Wife, Grace: A Novel, And Wrote My Story Anyway: Black South African Women’s Novels as Feminism and editor of Lauretta Ngcobo: Writing as the Practice of Freedom
Publication date: February 2025
ISBN: 978-1-0672224-9-9
Cover photograph and other photographs in the book by Coral Bijoux.
Cover design: Monique Cleghorn
Respondents: Makhosazana Xaba, Janet Aalfs, Hisla Bates, Sarah Malotane Henkeman, Gcobani Qambela, Lindy ‘Gogo Masechaba’ Dlamini, Iman Rappetti, June Bam, FreeQuency, Coral Bijoux, Peter Fox, Pregs Govender, Fiona Ross, Barbara Boswell
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

MALIKA LUEEN NDLOVU is an internationally published South African poet, playwright, performer and arts project manager. Her poetry collections include Born in Africa but (1999), Womb to World: A Labour of Love (2001), Truth is Both Spirit and Flesh (2008), Invisible Earthquake: A woman’s journal through stillbirth (2009), and CLOSE (2017). Her published plays are A Coloured Place (1998) and Sister Breyani (2010).
Author: Malika Lueen Ndlovu

MALIKA LUEEN NDLOVU is an internationally published South African poet, playwright, performer and arts project manager. For several years, she was the live festival and online curator / presenter for the Africa Centre’s Badilisha Poetry X-Change which pioneered an exclusively African poetry podcasting platform. As a founder-member of Cape Town-based women writers’ collective WEAVE (1998–2004), she co-edited WEAVE’s Ink @ Boiling Point: A selection of 21st Century Black Women’s writing from the Southern Tip of Africa. In 2004, she initiated And The Word Was Woman Ensemble. Her poetry collections include Born in Africa but (1999), Womb to World: A Labour of Love (2001), Truth is Both Spirit and Flesh (2008), Invisible Earthquake: A woman’s journal through stillbirth (2009), and CLOSE (2017). Her published plays are A Coloured Place (1998) and Sister Breyani (2010). She features prominently in Our Words, Our Worlds: Writing on Black South African Women Poets, 2000–2018 (UKZN Press, 2019), edited by Makhosazana Xaba, and in Collaborative Conversations: Celebrating twenty-one years of The Mothertongue Project, edited by Alex Halligey and Sara Matchett (Modjaji Books, 2021).
Originally from KwaZulu-Natal, she has lived in Cape Town for twenty-seven years, where her applied arts practice, specifically within the NGO sector and University-associated programmes, has grown wide and deep roots. She features in UCT’s Medicine and the Arts: Humanizing Healthcare MOOC, which continues to feed into a global conversation on the multiple merits of an interdisciplinary approach using the arts within clinical settings. This MOOC served the development of the Critical Health Humanities in Africa course as part of the MA degree programme in Health Humanities and the Arts, launched in 2022. For WITS University’s Drama For Life 2018 conference, Malika’s keynote address and performance was entitled Poetic Navigation: Mapping creative pathways through trauma, grief and re-membering, using poetry as an integrative process of release, documentation and memorialization. Via her poetic memoir, Invisible Earthquake: A woman’s journal through stillbirth (Modjaji Books, 2009) and website invisiblestill.co.za, Malika has also become a passionately vocal advocate around pregnancy-related loss, bereavement support and maternal health.
Some of Malika’s presentations and collaborations in this sphere /arena include the BAHI (Borrowed Angels Healing Initiative) annual concerts, Saving Newborn Lives, Compassionate Friends CT Chapter, Mowbray Maternity Hospital, Cape Town Midwifery & Birth Conference, Zulu Birth Project at the Human Rights in Childbirth (HRIC) 2015 Africa Summit and the Women Deliver 2019 Conference, the world’s largest conference on gender equality and the health, rights and wellbeing of girls and women, held in Vancouver, Canada. Malika’s story and insights on this subject feature in internationally published articles and interviews, including the Lancet Medical Journal, SANDS (Miscarriage, Stillbirth & Newborn Death Support) Newsletters, BBC World Service, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s ‘Impatient Optimist’ and WHO’s April 2017 World Health Day online campaign on depression and other mental health issues. In 2019, as the pandemic lockdowns began, she joined the Arts in Psychosocial Support CoP (community of practice), a national network of arts therapists, applied artists and community arts facilitators, and co-hosted its online series called Courageous Conversations. As a member of this CoP and NGO Sp(i)eel Art Therapies Collective, Malika was part of an international research project team which produced Arts For Health South Africa (artsforhealthsa.org.za), funded by UNICEF’s Youth Empowerment and Health / Economic Responses to covid-19 (YEaH). As a community voice and trans-disciplinary practitioner, Malika is a member of the National Management Committee of the UBOMI BUHLE National Pregnancy Exposure Registry Project, contributing to their medical staff training course in the form of a module centred on maternal loss, grieving well and care for the caregivers. ‘Dancing with Mountains’*, her 2020 article on poetry as healing practice, was published by UNISA Press in Education as Change 24.1 (2020) on Decoloniality in/and Poetry.
Passionate about poetry as a form of research, Malika features in Voices Unbound: Poems from the 8th International Symposium of Poetic Inquiry with her three-part event harvesting poem, a commissioned work published by HSRC Press and African Sun Press in 2023. Her multi-modal keynote entitled Re-turning to Ourselves, Our Wealth: Poetic Reflections opened the 2023 Inaugural Conference of the African Humanities Association at UCT. Malika sees her trans-disciplinary work, site-specific ritual performances and multi-media collaborations with various artists as both activism and ancestral medicine work.
*This title references ‘We Will Dance with Mountains’, the work of Dr Bayo Akomolafe: bayoakomolafe.net.
Author photograph: Kamal Ndlovu
