Catalyst South Africa: Q&A with SarahBelle Selig & Izak de Vries

While our authors make us special, without SarahBelle Selig and Izak de Vries as part of our team, Catalyst Press would be missing a huge part of its heart and soul. While our U.S. team members keep things humming a world away, these two have made us a truly international company. Whether through their connections with South Africa’s literary community, or with the kind of personal touch that only comes from a face-to-face meeting, they have helped build Catalyst South Africa into, what we hope, is a part of the local reading scene. We couldn’t do any of this without them. Ashawnta Jackson, a U.S.-based Catalyst team member, chatted to the pair about their work.

SarahBelle Selig and Izak de Vries

SarahBelle, can you tell us a bit about your role at Catalyst? What is the South African branch up to?

Specifically in South Africa, I’ve got a bit of a liaison role, which means I’m working face to face with our local authors, our South African distributor, and the many great booksellers and educators we’re connected with here. Izak and I also tag team our local publicity: everything from getting reviews for our authors in South African media, to getting them on panels at festivals.

We’re having so much fun at Catalyst South Africa these days! We’ve ramped up our events, from book launches and comics workshops, to author readings at local school libraries and even a beach cleanup. We hosted a booth at the inaugural Comic Con Cape Town to show off our amazing line up of African graphic novels and to connect with readers. We’re busy prepping the release of our first ever Afrikaans book for kids, and we’re actively building out our relationships with local nonprofits, bookstores, and schools. The Catalyst office is definitely the most active here that it’s ever been, I’d say.

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The Writer’s Notebook: Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu

via Windham-Campbell Prize

As many of you know, Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu won a Windham-Campbell award in 2022. It has been a whirlwind here ever since, so we can only imagine what it’s like for Siphiwe! We’re a tiny press with a tiny staff, but we have such an enormous love for our authors and their books, and the Windham-Campbell Prize recognizing one of those authors feels amazing. As part of her award tour, Siphiwe has been featured in the Yale Review‘s special Windham-Campbell issue and, most recently, just wrote a beautiful essay for the Windham-Campbell “Writer’s Notebook” series.

We couldn’t be prouder to publish Siphiwe’s gorgeous and innovative writing. Her award-winning novels The Theory of Flight and The History of Man are both out now, with the final book in her City of Kings Trilogy, The Quality of Mercy, out this fall. Below is an excerpt of her Writer’s Notebook piece where she discusses the inspiration for The Quality of Mercy.

I will always say this because it is true—my grandmother was a phenomenal storyteller. She could make any story come into Technicolor life: an oral fable passed down through the generations, an unexpectedly spectacular thing that one of her students had done, a past event that she retrieved from the vast treasure trove that was her memory. A few years before she died in 2014, she told me a story about a man who instantly fell so in love with a woman that he followed her all the way to her village where he was immediately set the task of solving a mystery in order to win her hand in marriage. This story was the genesis of what would become my third novel, The Quality of Mercy.

Read the full essay here

Writers of Zimbabwe, a #ReadingAfrica Panel

We’re excited to present a special, pre-recorded panel of Zimbabwean writers. We have the honor of publishing two (soon to be three) books by award-wining author Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu, and when she asked us if she could convene a panel of some of her writing community to talk about what they’re working on, what they’re reading, or as Siphiwe puts it in the conversation “We write from the continent, I think we do both the reading and the writing from Africa, and I just really want to capture us as a community, and then share that.”

This conversation features CM Elliott, Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu, Susan Hubert, Bryony Rheam, John Eppel, and Violette Kee-Tui. Moderated by Drew Shaw. Transcript to come.

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The Spark: The “Wow, September is a big month” Edition

Hot from the Press

September is both #NationalTranslationMonth and #WorldKidLitMonth, and to celebrate both at once, here’s an amazing reading of his YA novel Halley’s Comet by author and translator Hannes Barnard, as part of Translators Aloud’s month long celebration.

Caroline Kurtz, author of the memoirs A Road Called Down on Both Sides and recently released Today is Tomorrow, is giving a reading at Wordfest in Longview, Washington this coming Tuesday at 6pm PST, and Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu, Windham Campbell Prize winning author of The Theory of Flight and The History of Man, got a nice mention in Lizzy Attree’s LA Times review of Glory, NoViolet Bulawayo’s Booker Prize shortlisted novel.

And finally, ICYMI, check out the announcement for Panel & Page, our newly launched graphic novel series which kicks off with the 2023 releases of Pearl of the Sea and KARIBA. Pre-orders available now

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The Spark: The “We ❤️ Libraries” Edition

It’s a fairly quiet week. This is partly because here in the US we’re in the last throes of summer, when the pace slows down just a bit, and everyone soaks up the last bit of summer fun they can. The other part is that I was on a very long vacation, and leaving the vacation world and coming back to the book world has been, let’s say, not the easiest transition. So this is a light load, but still full of exciting news.

Hot from the Press

Another great review for All Rise! This time, from one of our favorite places— the library! Kate Brittian, the Teen Librarian at the Wilson County Public Library in North Carolina, reviewed All Rise as part of the library’s weekly Teen Book Review.

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The Spark: The “Way to Go, Sifiso!” Edition

Hot from the Press

Late last week, we received the amazing news that Young Blood, Sifiso Mzobe’s crime novel set in Durban’s Umlazi township, was shortlisted for the 2022 Hurston/Wright Foundation Legacy Award! The winner will be announced on October 27th, but we’re so thrilled to see Sifiso on this incredible list of finalists. Read more about the book at the end of this post!

Huge congrats to Bridget Krone, the award-winning author of Small Mercies, for the launch of her newest middle grade novel, The Cedarville Shop and the Wheelbarrow Swap! To celebrate her South African pub date last week (don’t worry, USA readers! The book is available in North America and worldwide in just a few weeks), Top Class Books in Hilton, South Africa hosted a marvelous launch with almost 100 attendees. Bridget will spend the next few weeks touring schools in Pietermaritzburg and Johannesburg, as well as attending book signings and readings.

Also this week, Today is Tomorrow author Caroline Kurtz was honored alongside her sister Jane and the Reverend Bill Chadwick during a virtual event hosted by the Presbyterian Writers Guild. Caroline’s first memoir, The Road Called Down on Both Sides: Growing Up in Ethiopia and America was awarded the Presbyterian Writers Guild’s Best First Book Award. You can read more about the event, and Caroline’s response to the award, here

And finally, The History of Man author Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu and Bom Boy author Yewande Omotoso will both be taking part as panelists at the 2022 Open Book Festival in Cape Town, September 2-4!

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The Spark: The “Hey, that’s a lot of news” Edition

Hot from the Press

Congratulations to Bridget Krone who was named a 2022 Skipping Stones Honor Award winner this week, for her debut novel Small Mercies! We are honored to publish both Small Mercies and Bridget’s second middle grade novel, The Cedarville Shop and the Wheelbarrow Swap, which comes out this September. Pre-order your copy now!

Also this week, The History of Man author Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu was featured in this amazing interview with The Rumpus to discuss the book’s complicated main character, Zimbabwean writers, Siphiwe’s literary influences, and more. And don’t miss this interview with our Catalyst Press staff on The Mystery of Writing!

This Wednesday July 13th at 12pm EST, tune in to this virtual event with the 2022 AKO Caine Prize shortlisted authors, including our very own Idza Luhumyo, whose short story “Five Years Next Sunday” is featured in Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa. Register here, and while you’re at it, check out this great feature of Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa on Brittle Paper!

Visit Women Writers, Women’s Books to read a new essay from Today is Tomorrow author, Caroline Kurtz on the difficulties and rewards of writing memoir.

And lastly, huge congrats to Futhi Ntshingila for being longlisted for the 2022 Sunday Times Literary Awards, announced this week! We were lucky enough to publish Futhi’s novel We Kiss Them With Rain back in 2018.

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The Spark: Award Season Edition

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DISRUPTION

We got some wonderful awards news this week for one of the authors from Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa! Mbozi Haimbre was named a finalist for the African Speculative Fiction Society’s Nommo Award for Best Short Story for her story, “Shelter.” We are so thrilled for Mbozi, and hope you will join us in celebrating! Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa is the 2021 anthology from Short Story Day Africa, a nonprofit based in Cape Town, South Africa on a mission to elevate new and emerging African authors. And it’s available now worldwide!              

HALLEY’S COMET

This week, we celebrated World Bee Day with (buzz-worthy!) excerpts from two Catalyst titles on our site, and LitNet posted this amazing interview with Hannes Barnard, Halley’s Comet author and translator. And ICYMI, two Catalyst authors participated in great events this week that you can catch up on now. First, All Rise: Resistance and Rebellion author Richard Conyngham and illustrator Tumi Mamabolo took part in a virtual event with Interference Archive, moderated by our very own Catalyst Press publicist Ashawnta Jackson. And later in the week, The Theory of Flight and The History of Man author (and recent Windham Campbell Prize winner!) Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu was hosted by the Grandmothers to Grandmothers campaign as part of their Contemporary African Voices series.

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Upcoming Events

Join us for these great events in May: Author Richard Conyngham and artist Tumi Mamabolo at Interference Archive and Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu at the Contemporary African Voices Series.

Plus! You could win copies of both of Siphiwe’s books.

Author Richard Conyngham explored South Africa’s Supreme Court of Appeal’s basement archive, and through that research, was able to construct narratives of six cases of stories of resistance and rebellion from the period loosely known as the “Union years”—between South Africa’s unification in 1910 and the beginning of apartheid in 1948. These are stories of passive resisters, strikers, rebels, and revolutionaries fought back in the streets and in the courts.

The result of that work was the illustrated history, All Rise: Resistance and Rebellion in South Africa, which was created with a team of South African artists. Join Richard and artist Tumi Mamabolo on Sunday, May 22 at 1:00 pm ET to explore the ways artists and creative writers can make use of archival materials, to discuss how archives and primary sources can be an effective avenue for creative work, and how the artists and writers filled archival gaps through creative decision-making to construct the stories we read in All Rise. Hosted by Interference Archive.

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