SALA 2025: Full List of Winners Announced

20th edition of SALA honours South African literary talents

The 20th edition of the South African Literary Awards (SALA) lived up to its stellar
reputation of celebrating excellence when it honoured forty-nine (49) South African
writers, translators and other literary practitioners across 16 categories at a
prestigious ceremony held at the delectably newly revamped Roodepoort Theatre
and Museum, in Johannesburg, on 11th November 2025.

Over two hundred dignitaries attended the event that is increasingly being regarded
as the “Oscars” of the literary calendar in South Africa. SALA was founded by wRite
associates in 2005 in collaboration with the Department of Sport, Arts and Culture
(DSAC). This year’s ceremony was the culmination of many months of sifting
through nominees to find the winner in each category.

The Minister of Sport, Arts and Culture, Mr Gayton McKenzie, delivered a
resounding keynote address with humorous and inspiring anecdotes about how he
began his journey as a writer, bringing the ceremony to thunderous applause with
the undertaking to host “…the biggest ever writers’ festival on Robben Island in April
2026…”.

“The South African Literary Awards have become a sanctuary for these voices, a
space where all eleven official languages find equal dignity and where the full
breadth of our literary heritage is affirmed. Our Department of Sport, Arts and
Culture, together with the Gauteng Department of Sport, Arts, Culture and
Recreation, as well as the City of Johannesburg, stand proudly alongside this noble
initiative”, said Minister McKenzie.

This year’s awards coincided with the 13th Africa Century International African
Writers Conference, which celebrates the 34th International African Writers’ Day and 31 years of South Africa’s democracy. In 1991, the Conference of African Ministers of Education and Culture in Cotonou, Benin, voted to designate November 7th as International African Writers’ Day, which is currently observed across the continent.

Delivering the Lecture was Prof Wangui wa Goro, the Kenyan academic, social critic,
researcher, translator and writer based in the UK, titled The Future of African
Writing: The Transforming Landscapes, Enhancing the Mbokodo Narratives.
SALA is a vital platform for recognising the contributions of authors, translators,
poets, and other literary practitioners. DSAC, together with her Gauteng Provincial
and City of Johannesburg counterparts, play a crucial role in supporting this initiative, demonstrating their commitment to promoting cultural and literary excellence.

“In these 13th and 20th annual iterations of the International African Writers’ Day
Lecture and the South African Literary Awards, respectively, we welcome very warmly the City of Johannesburg and the Gauteng Provincial Department of Education, Sport, Arts, Culture and Heritage into the tried and tested partnership SALA is having with the National Department of Sport, Arts and Culture”.

To this end, the City of Johannesburg’s MMC for Community Development, Councilor Sthembiso Zungu, together with Gauteng Provincial Department of Education, Sport, Arts, Recreation and Culture’s Director, Ms Vonani Baloyi, emphasised the importance and necessity of the partnership with SALA.

The SALA honours literary work across 16 categories, as follows:
1. First-Time Published Author Literary Award
2. k. Sello Duiker Memorial Literary Award
3. Nadine Gordimer Short Story Literary Award
4. National Poet Laureate Prize
5. Regional Poet Laureate Prize
6. Local Poet Laureate Prize
7. Poetry Award
8. Literary Translators Award
9. Lifetime Achievement Literary Award
10. Posthumous Literary Award
11. Literary Journalism Award
12. Creative Non-Fiction Award
13. Chairperson’s Award
14. Children’s Literature Award
15. Youth Literature Award
16. Novel Award

The Awards have previously recognised luminaries such as poets laureate Mazisi
Kunene, Mongane Wally Serote, Keorapetse Kgositsile, Nobel Laureate Nadine
Gordimer, and other outstanding writers like Prof Eskia Mphahlele,, Don Mattera, Bessie Head, Antjie Krog, among many others across the various categories and 11 official languages.

Below is the 2025 South African Literary Awards shortlist of winners and runners-up:
Children’s Literature Award
1. Kabelo Duncan Kgatea – Petleke ya Malemelagotlhe
2. Phuti Seboni – Rakgolo Masoba
3. Upile uThixo Bongco – Big shoes to fill

Runner-Up
1. Nkateko Emily Mabasa – Celebrating Our Differences: Embracing My Superpowers

First-Time Published Author Award
1. Lebogang Seale – One Hundred Years of Dispossession: My family’s quest to reclaim our land
2. Happy Gladness Simelane – Thandeka

Runner-Up
1. Lungile ka Dlamini – And Give Us This Day Our Daily Hope

Youth Literature Award
1. Kobate John Sekele – Sejamosela se fetetša noka
2. Seakgwe Phalatse – Menomasweu
3. Vusi Makhoba – Mhlawumbe Ngale Kwethuna
4. Tiah Marie Beautement – A Tale of Many Tangents

k. Sello Duiker Memorial Literary Award

Runner-Up
1. Lesedi Molefi – Patient 12A

Poetry Award
1. Sizakele Nkosi – u Grand, Malume?
2. Molebatsi Bosilong – Mosikaro
3. Bafana Charles Peter – Umkhumezelo Umqulu 3
4. Muntomuhle Silindokuhle Mcambi – Amagagasi Enjabulo
5. Mosima Phakane – Go Ribega tša Masa
6. Vutshila Mission Magaisa – Vutshila bya vutlhokovetseri

Runner-Up
1. Frank Meintjies – A place to night in
2. M H Hlaka – Tau Ahlama
3. Hlayiseka S Rikhotso – Nyika nkarhi, nkarhi
4. Nombeko Nontshokweni – uNobuntu
5. Muntomuhle Silindokuhle Mcambi – Ukufa Kwenono

Nadine Gordimer Short Story Award
1. Raphashe Abram Lesufi – TEMOŠO SETŠHABENG
2. Zaheera Jina Asvat – Tears of the Weaver
3. Kwandile Hadebe – Ishumi

Runner-Up
1. David Mann – Once Removed: Short Stories

Creative Non-Fiction Literary Award
1. Maria Suriano – A Rare Gift To The Struggle: Ma Vesta Smith and The Everyday Politics of Liberation

Runner-Up
1. Adekeye Adebajo – The Black Atlantic’s Triple Burden: Slavery, Colonialism, and Reparations

Literary Translators Award
1. Moses Seletisha – Ke Rata Punky
2. Sifiso Mzobe – Izinkabi: Yasho Inganono, Laphalala Igazi

Novel Award
1. Bulelani Matshoba – Akwaba Ndandingambonanga
2. KOBATE JOHN SEKELE – DITLHOKA TŠA BAGADITŠONG
3. Barbara Boswell – The Comrade’s Wife
4. Musa Aubrey Baloyi – Xilondza Xa Le Nhompfini

Runner-Up
1. Nick Clelland – Good Hope
2. Mandlakayise Mfanta – Ing’iyayikhotha Kanti Iyayixathula

Posthumous Literary Award
1. Magema Magwaza Fuze
2. Molema Mokae
3. Mbongeni Ngema
4. Joan Baker
5. Donald Parenzee
6. Juby Mayet
7. Matsemela Manaka
8. Maishe Maponya
9. Breyten Breytenbach
10. Mohlomi Moleleki
11. Colin Smuts

Chairperson’s Literary Award
1. Mzwakhe Mbuli

Lifetime Achievement Award
1. John Kani
2. Mavis Smallberg

 

Related Articles

Latest Articles