Kwela Books

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Kwela Books is a South African publishing house founded in Cape Town in 1994 as a new imprint of NB Publishers.[1]

1994-2004

In the first ten years it published several books.

Notable publications

2004-present

Post 2004 Kwela continued to publish, winning several awards.

Notable publications

  • Dog Eat Dog by Niq Mhlongo, 2004 - winner of the 2005 Mar des Lettras Prize
  • All We Have Left Unsaid by
    Herman Charles Bosman Prize
    for English Fiction.
  • Behind Every Successful Man by Zukiswa Wanner, 2008 -
  • The Dream in the Next Body by Gabeba Baderoon, 2005 - winner of the 2005 Daimler-Chrysler Prize.
  • The Rowing Lesson by
    The Sunday Times Fiction Prize
    2009.
  • Happiness is a Four-Letter Word by
    Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book, Africa Region and the M-Net Film Prize 2011 at the M-Net Literary Awards
    .
  • Homemaking for the Down-at-Heart by Finuala Dowling, 2011 - winner of the M-Net Prize for English Fiction 2012.
  • Young Blood by
    Herman Charles Bosman Prize
    for English Fiction, the SALA
  • Room 207 by
    Herman Charles Bosman Prize
    for English Fiction and the University of Johannesburg Prize for debut fiction.
  • Die staat teen Anna Bruwer by Anchien Troskie, 2012
  • The Lazarus Effect by
    The Sunday Times Fiction Prize
    2012.
  • Moss by Mary Watson, 2004 -
  • Siegfreid by Willem Anker, 2007 - winner of
  • Ancient Rites by Diale Tlholwe - winner of the SALA
  • Beauty's Gift by Sindiwe Magona, 2008 -
  • Small Moving Parts by Sally-Ann Murray, 2009 - winner of the M-Net Prize for English Fiction 2010
  • British Science Fiction Association Award for best novel,[2][3] listed as one of Brittle Paper's 100 Notable African Books of 2022.[4][5]

References

  1. ^ https://www.timeslive.co.za/authors/nb-publishers. "Jo'burg - come celebrate 25 years of Kwela Books! (February 28)". TimesLIVE. Retrieved 2023-06-13. {{cite web}}: External link in |last= (help)
  2. ^ British Science Fiction Association. "The British Science Fiction Association Awards Longlist". British Science Fiction Association. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  3. ^ De Waal, Shaun (20 January 2023). "SA authors (and one from Zim) win prizes, get longlisted". Mail & Guardian. Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  4. ^ Brittle Paper. "100 Notable African Books of 2022". Brittle Paper. Retrieved 11 July 2023.
  5. ^ Edoro-Glines, Ainehi (18 December 2022). "Brittle Paper's Notable African Books of 2022". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2023.

External links