This Week in Literary News: Week of May 30

YOUNG BLOOD

We love seeing Catalyst Press authors in the news! This week, Young Blood author Sifiso Mzobe spoke with author Jacob Ross about crime writing in South Africa and the Caribbean, at Rofhiwa Books in Durham, NC. Check out the replay here. And this upcoming Wednesday, Rofhiwa Books hosts another Catalyst Press author, Barbara Boswell of Unmaking Grace, in conversation with Professor Shanna Benjamin about the intellectual legacies of Black women in South Africa and the US. Register for the event here, which will take place at 10:00am EST on this Wednesday July 9th. Barbara is also featured in a new essay collection about Black feminist writers of South Africa. She’s joined by a host of other amazing writers including Catalyst author Yewande Omotoso (Bom Boy). The collection got some great press this week.

It’s my favorite week of the year: which is 1. Hay Festival Week (which runs through this Sunday) and 2. The kickoff week of Pride Month! View the digital Hay Fest program to register for this weekend’s panels and catch up on all the ones you’ve already missed! Spoiler alert: it’s the best lineup yet. And to celebrate Pride, here’s a booklist from Harper’s Bazaar, queer romances from Book Riot, and a quiz to help you pick your first (and second, and third) LGBTQ+ read. Or check out the winners of the 33rd Annual Lambda Literary Awards, which celebrates LGBTQ+ books and authors, announced this week. Happy reading—and happy Pride! Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of May 30”

Sifiso Mzobe in The Big Thrill

SIFISO MZOBE

We are thrilled to be the US publisher for Sifiso Mzobe’s multi-award-winning novel Young Blood. This gripping coming-of-age/crime novel is set in the South African township of Umlazi and centers on Sipho, a teenager who finds himself spiraling deeper and deeper into the township’s criminal underworld. How far can he push his luck before there’s no turning back?

Sifiso recently sat down with Joanne Hichens for an interview with The Big Thrill Magazine about his work and the novel. If that interviewer’s name sounds familiar, it’s because Joanne can also be seen around Catalyst HQ (virtually, anyway) as the author of another one of our books— Divine Justice, which is also out now! Continue reading “Sifiso Mzobe in The Big Thrill”

Watch: Events with Catalyst Authors Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu & Sifiso Mzobe

This month, two of our authors— Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu and Sifiso Mzobe— had events. In the before-times, when you missed a great event, that was it; you saw some pictures, and your friends told you all about the fantastic time you missed. But that was then, and this is now. Now you have a second chance to check out these authors in person (or, you know, virtually, on your couch, in your pjs). Continue reading “Watch: Events with Catalyst Authors Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu & Sifiso Mzobe”

This Week in Literary News: Week of April 18

YOU”RE A STAR LOLO

First things first – Catalyst news! Niki Daly’s illustrated children’s book You’re a Star, Lolo got a starred review in Kirkus, and Luke Molver accepted his award for his graphic novel Shaka Rising, which was named an Honor Book for Older Readers by the Children’s Africana Book Awards last year. Two of our novelists, Young Blood author Sifiso Mzobe and Theory of Flight author Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu, were featured in virtual talks this week – and both talks are now available to watch online! Join Sifiso on Stony Brook University’s Writers Speak Wednesdays and Siphiwe in conversation with Mercer University’s Dr. Vasile Stanescu.

And in honor of Earth Day this week, we’re offering a major discount on two of our titles, David Muirhead’s essay collection on South African animals Cat Among the Pigeons and Bridget Krone’s middle-grade novel Small Mercies. Use the code EARTHDAY at checkout on our site for 30% off both titles, only available until the end of April!

Tomorrow is Independent Bookstore day! Check out IndieBound’s indie bookstore finder and go buy yourself a book (or two, or twelve–we won’t judge!) to celebrate. UK bookstores have reopened just in time to take part in the revelry, and book sales went up a third in less than a week.

Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of April 18”

This Week in Literary News: Week of April 4

Young Blood

This month is full of chances to see Catalyst authors in action. First up, catch Catalyst publisher/founder Jessica Powers and her brother and Broken Circle (Akashic Books) co-author Matthew as part of Cochise College’s Community Creative Writing Celebration on April 16. The reading will be followed by a Q&A, then an open mic. Learn more here. And on April 21, you can catch Sifiso Mzobe, author of the award-winning novel Young Blood, as he steps on the virtual stage for Stony Brook University’s Creative Writing and Literature Writers Speak Wednesday series. The event will be streamed live on the university’s YouTube channel. More information here. Sifiso’s novel is out on April 13.

In other news, following the controversy around American Dirt, Michael Ugarte of Africa is a Country, raises questions about another book, Palmeras en la Nieve, whose “critical reception among historians of Spanish colonization efforts in Africa has been less than positive.”

“Animals have inspired writers since the beginning of the written word” The New York Times presents “Writer’s Best Friend,” a look at some notable writers furry friends, including Jackie Collins’ poodle, George Orwell’s goat, Muriel, and Toni Morrison’s cat.  Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of April 4”

This Week in Literary News: Week of March 28

BARBARA BOSWELL

In Catalyst news, Barbara Boswell’s new nonfiction book And Wrote my Story Anyway (Wits University Press) was just shortlisted for the South African Humanities & Social Sciences Award in the Best Non-Fiction Single Authored Monographs category! We are proud to publish Barbara’s novel Unmaking Grace in North America.

Another of our authors, Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu, will be (virtually) appearing on April 9 at 2:00 pm EST at Mercer University for a reading and discussion of her new book The Theory of Flight. Check our event calendar for more info and the event Zoom link.

In other awards news, the National Book Critics Circle Award winners were announced this week, and Kenya’s Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o was just nominated as author and translator for the International Booker Prize, making his novel The Perfect Nine the first work written in an indigenous African language to be longlisted.

The book business was in the headlines a lot this week, thanks to a Seattle law firm suing Amazon for colluding to fix book prices and a bill in the Maryland state senate that’s pitting libraries against publishers (and Amazon, of course). Scholastic made the decision this week to pull a book by Captain Underpants author Dav Pilkey on account of the book’s harmful racial undertones, and if you need a new writing gig, Chinese tech giant China Literature wants to hire 100,000 North American writers to help boost its web fiction mega-business sales in the US and Canada. Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of March 28”

This Week in Literary News: Week of March 14

Here’s a little something for the comics lovers. Michigan State University is hosting “Beyond the Black Panther: Visions of Afrofuturism in American Comics,” a virtual exhibit exploring “how themes such as aesthetics, Black feminism, and community, common to Afrofuturism, shape contemporary Black comics.”

And speaking of Afrofuturism, check out this great article at LitHub— Emily Lordi talks with pioneering musician Nona Hendryx: “There’s a whole group of speculative fiction nerd people, of which I count myself one,” who connect online and eventually collaborate—“you sort of come out of your Afrofuturism closet at some point and go ‘Ah, yes, I am just a nerd as well! I may look like this,’” she said, gesturing at her glamorous self, “‘but this is what I am.’”

Seeing yourself and your stories in the media is such a valuable and important thing. In this article from Smithsonian magazine, a profile of children’s book author Alicia D. Williams on writing the stories she wished she could see as a child. On the importance of sharing these stories with young readers, Williams says, “They’re in control of the information when they write the narrative themselves, from their point of view, instead of accepting what’s been told to them. Give them the information, and they’re the storytellers. That’s what I want.”

A wonderful and always timely project, Black and Asian Feminist Solidarities, a collaboration between Black Women Radicals and the Asian American Feminist Collective, “looks to Black and Asian American feminist histories, practices, and frameworks on care, community, and survival for the tools and strategies to continue to build towards collective liberation.” There are reading lists, interviews, articles, and more. And over at the Atlantic, an interview with author Cathy Park Hong on the wave racist attacks against Asian people.

Want to explain vaccines to a kid in your life? A new graphic novel might be just the thing. But as this New York Times article points out, the form that book takes— physical or digital— might matter. “Print makes it easier for parents and children to interact with language, questions and answers, what is called “dialogic reading.” Further, many apps and e-books have too many distractions.”

Jessica Powers

In Catalyst news, this month Catalyst founder/publisher Jessica Powers hits the digital stage of the Dallas Literary Festival as part of a panel on small presses on at Charles M. Blow, Joy Harjo, and Deesha Philyaw. Check out the full schedule of events at their website.

At Hyperallergic,

 

This Week in Literary News: Week of March 7

Ahmed Ismail Yusuf

In Catalyst news, two of our wonderful authors got works published this week! In New Frame, Unmaking Grace author Barbara Boswell writes on the role of Booker shortlisted author Tsitsi Dangarembga’s art and activism in Zimbabwe and beyond, and The Lion’s Binding Oath author Ahmed Ismail Yusuf evaluates what the death of George Floyd and – just a few months later and a few blocks away – the death of Somali-American Dolal Idd means for the future of the American police force.

In celebrity book news, E.L. James, famed author of the Fifty Shades of Grey series, announced a new book in the series to be published this summer: Freed, written from Christian Grey’s perspective. Fans of the cult television series “American Horror Story” are reading Dante’s The Divine Comedy after a fan theory went viral, and a self-published cookbook by Andy Warhol is going to auction later this month and is expected to sell for no less than $30,000. And ICYMI (although I don’t see how), Dr. Seuss‘ publishing house has made the decision to cease printing of six of the author’s earlier children’s books, including McElligot’s Pool and And To Think That I Saw It On Mulberry Street, on account of racist imagery and derogatory character portrayals. Read up on the debate, then check out this Guardian piece on the history of removing racist sections from children’s books and one poet’s response on Book Riot.
Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of March 7”