Remembering Niki Daly

NIKI DALY

It is with heavy hearts that we share the news of the passing of beloved children’s author and illustrator, Niki Daly. We were honored to not just publish his work, but to call him a friend. His spirit and love practically burst from the pages of his books. The warmth and kindness in his words so perfectly echoed those in his heart.

Throughout his long career, Niki was the author/illustrator of over forty books for children. His critically-acclaimed books earned him a US Parent’s Choice Award, a Children’s Africana Book Award, a Children’s Literature Choice Award and the Parents’ Choice Silver Award, among many others. Most recently, he was awarded a Skipping Stones award for his book, Fly High, Lolo and a Charlotte Zolotow Award for his final book, On My Papa’s Shoulders, a beautiful ode to fathers and sons.

Niki had that ineluctable ability to write and illustrate irresistible children’s stories. And it’s no wonder, because he loved kids. But more than that, he respected them. He respected their voices, their thoughts, their emotions, never speaking down to them, but immersing himself in their world, and shining it back to them in his work. That is part of him that will live on— years from now, eras from now—in the smiles and excitement of a new generation turning the pages of his books.

All of us here at Catalyst Press send our deepest condolences to his wife, Jude, his sons Joe and Leo, his granddaughter Emily, and his daughter-in-law Magriet.

The Spark: The “A bit short but packed with news!” Edition

Hot from the Press

Tune in to two Catalyst author chats! This week, Lolo series author and illustrator Niki Daly chatted on South Africa’s CapeTalk radio with Lester Kiewit about his work. Give it a listen, and find out more about the Lolo series here. And mark your calendars for Friday August 12th for the launch of Small Mercies author Bridget Krone’s newest middle-grade book, The Cedarville Shop and the Wheelbarrow Swap, hosted in Bridget’s hometown of Hilton, South Africa! If you can’t make it in person (it’s a bit of a long flight from the USA), the event will be livestreamed here at 12pm EST, Friday August 12th.

The week in review

The shortlist for the inaugural Ursula K. Le Guin Prize were announced this week, the Center for Fiction announced its longlist for the First Novel Prize, and a new translation prize for South Asian literature was announced. The New York Times has a new books editor, Gillian Flynn is going to murder someone on a cruise, and Barack Obama released his 2022 summer reading list.

July is Disability Pride month, and we’ve been celebrating all month long! Here’s a great reading list to introduce you to disability literature, seven nonfiction audiobooks by disabled authors and fiction audiobooks with disabled protagonists. Get reading!

For thought provoking pieces, Felice Arenas writes about childless woman tropes, Lio Min explores gender and sexuality in anime, Oscar Hokeah chronicles Native American lives, and Helen Kapstein reports on what Americans can learn from South Africa’s Apartheid-era book banning. Jonny Diamond shared his thoughts on BookToken, the new NFT system for ebooks, and CNN investigates Joyce Carol Oates’ claims on Twitter that young white men are being “shut out” of publishing [Editor’s note: LOL, JCO]

Continue reading “The Spark: The “A bit short but packed with news!” Edition”

The Spark

Hot from the Press

HALLEY’S COMET

Halley’s Comet by Hannes Barnard got a great mention in this article about representative YA literature, On My Papa’s Shoulders is a staff pick at the LA County Library, and in case you missed the big news from last week: Idza Luhumyo’s short story “Five Years Next Sunday”, featured in Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa, was awarded the 2022 Caine Prize alongside a record setting shortlist!

Awards News

The Miles Franklin Award pulled John Hughes’ The Dogs from its 2022 longlist after Hughes admitted to plagiarizing Svetlana Alexievich’s The Unwomanly Face of War. But people are now drawing similarities to other works of classic literature, including The Great Gatsby, Anna Karenina, and All is Quiet on the Western Front.

Announced this week: the winners of the 2022 Lambda Literary Awards, which celebrate LGBTQ+ literature; Ruth Ozeki’s The Book of Form and Emptiness takes home the Women’s Prize for Fiction; and The Orphanage by Serhiy Zhadan and translated from Ukrainian by Reilly Costigan-Humes and Isaac Stackhouse Wheeler wins the 2022 EBRD Literature Prize.

Costa announced unexpectedly that the 2021 Costa Book Awards were its last, and the Society of Authors announced a new prize, the ACDI Literary Prize, which will celebrate positive representation of disability in literature.

Continue reading “The Spark”

The Spark: The Long Weekend Edition

Hot from the Press

TODAY IS TOMORROW

Catch up on two great Catalyst author events:

Caroline Kurtz did a virtual reading with Annie Bloom’s Bookshop from her new book, Today is Tomorrow, a follow up to her award-winning memoir A Road Called Down on Both Sides: Growing up in Ethiopia and America. Today is Tomorrow, which reflects on the years Caroline and her husband spent working with war refugees in South Sudan and Kenya, is on sale April 19. Happy pub week, Caroline!

And on Friday, Johns Hopkins’ Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences hosted a great conversation with Windham-Campbell Prize winner Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu. We’re proud to be the North American publisher for Siphiwe’s The Theory of Flight and The History of Man, both available now!

FLY HIGH, LOLO

And finally, the fourth book in Niki Daly’s beloved Lolo series, Fly High, Lolo, just received a starred review from School Library Journal! SLJ called the book “a beautiful addition to the series, and a worthy addition to library shelves.” Fly High, Lolo, a Junior Library Guild Gold Standard Selection, is available for pre-order now. Continue reading “The Spark: The Long Weekend Edition”

Introducing The Spark

Welcome to The Spark, our weekly roundup of news from Catalyst and beyond. This is our first edition with our brand new fancy name. Think of The Spark as a quick burst of news, a little shorter than our monthly(ish) newsletter, but just as fun. A fun-sized version of the Catalyst news you know and love. If you’re not subscribed to the full-sized version, be sure to subscribe here!

Hot from the Press

DISRUPTION

Two great mentions for Catalyst Press authors this week! Nigerian author Wole Talabi named his top ten favorite stories of 2021, and two (!!) stories from Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa were listed (“Shelter” by Mbozi Haimbe, and “Five Years Next Sunday” by Idza Luhumyo). We are proud to be the North American publisher for Disruption, available in stores and online. And Consortium Library Express featured a sneak peak of Niki Daly’s newest Lolo book, Fly High, Lolo. Fly High, Lolo  is available for pre-order now. For more info on the Lolo early reader series, check out the “From the Backlist” section below.

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What’s New in 2022

Fall is in the air here (translation: I’m already cold). As the calendar pages start falling away on 2021, we thought it’d be a good time to give you all a little sneak peek at our upcoming titles— many of which are available for pre-order.

We’re excited to add more books from one of our favorite children’s authors, Niki Daly, our very first young adult book in translation, and a new addition to our growing list of graphic novels. In addition to those, we think there’s something for just about every kind of reader in our 2022 catalog. Continue reading “What’s New in 2022”

This Week in Literary News: Week of August 1

Happy Women in Translation Month! This month, we’re celebrating with 20% off of Sacrificed (paperback or ebook), the U.S. debut of bestselling Afrikaans author Chanette Paul, translated by Elsa Silke. Read an excerpt of the thriller that the New York Journal of Books says “places Chanette Paul among the classiest thriller writers of our day.” And be sure check out some of our posts from WIT Months past with tips on how you can add more translated literature— especially by women authors— to your bookshelves!

In celebrity author news, Mel Brooks is penning a memoir at 95, our beloved Mother of Dragons Emilia Clarke has a new superhero comic book (sigh…not about dragons), and Abby Wambach recommends three books on sports and leadership. And in South African author news, 38-year-old Karen Jennings is nominated for a Booker for her novel, The Island. This week, she spoke with The Guardian about repeated rejections and writing while poor.

Romance Writers of America is in trouble again, after having awarded their top prize for religious book of the year to a book about a genocidal, misogynistic maniac—and then promptly rescinding it. And just when we thought they were fixing things up over at RWA

Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of August 1”

This Week in Literary News: Week of July 18

NIKI DALY

Let’s start out with some Catalyst news! Niki Daly, the author of several children’s books including the Lolo series, was recently awarded a South African Children’s Laureate Award by the University of the Western Cape Faculty of Education and the SA Festival of Children’s Literature. In presenting Niki the prize, children’s lit scholar and editor Dr. Mia Oosthuizen, said it nicely “you capture the imagination and children’s magnificent everyday lives.”

“Thirty years ago, few people in the art world were interested in Africa. The images of the continent that circulated at the time were primarily news images of famines and wars. At best, people had an exotic vision of it.” Great article on how Revue Noire, a magazine and publishing house that brought a nuanced view of Africa through photography.

Our friend Lizzy Attree has a wonderful essay at Africa is a Country on what literature can teach us about our connections to nature and what we owe to the Earth. We are thrilled to be working with Lizzy, and all of the wonderful folks at Short Story Day Africa to release Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa in September. Continue reading “This Week in Literary News: Week of July 18”