Sunday Times CNA Literary Awards

The Sunday Times CNA Literary Awards are awarded annually to South African writers by the South African weekly newspaper the Sunday Times. They comprise the Sunday Times CNA Literary Award for Non-fiction and the Sunday Times CNA Literary Award for Fiction, and are awarded for full-length non-fiction works and novels, respectively. Both winners receive R100 000.[1] Ivan Vladislavic is the only person to have won both the fiction and the non-fiction award.

The Sunday Times CNA Non-Fiction Award
Sponsored byCNA
CountrySouth Africa
Presented bySunday Times
Formerly calledAlan Paton Award
Reward(s)R100 000
First awarded1989; 35 years ago (1989)
The Sunday Times CNA Fiction Award
Sponsored byCNA
CountrySouth Africa
Presented bySunday Times
Formerly calledBarry Ronge Fiction Prize; Sunday Times Fiction Prize
Reward(s)R100 000
First awarded2001; 23 years ago (2001)

History of the Awards

Originally established in 1989, the Alan Paton Award was conferred annually for meritorious works of non-fiction. It aimed to reward books presenting "the illumination of truthfulness, especially those forms of it that are new, delicate, unfashionable and fly in the face of power," and demonstrating "compassion, elegance of writing, and intellectual and moral integrity."[2] The award was named for Alan Paton, the famous South African author of Cry, The Beloved Country (1948).

In 2001, a companion award for fiction was established, the Sunday Times Fiction Prize. The criteria stipulate that the winning novel should be one of "rare imagination and style... a tale so compelling as to become an enduring landmark of contemporary fiction."[2] The prize was restructured in 2015 when fiction and non-fiction awards were brought together as the Sunday Times Literary Awards; the money for each prize was increased, from R75 000 to R100 000,[3] and the Fiction Prize was renamed the Barry Ronge Fiction Prize in honour of Barry Ronge, a renowned South African journalist who was one of the founders of the awards.[4]

In 2020, there was a one-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[5] However, the awards recommenced in 2021 with a new sponsor, CNA, a South African retail chain of stationery shops, and are now known as the Sunday Times CNA Literary Awards.[6] This sponsorship arrangement followed the acquisition of CNA from "embattled" parent company Edcon in February 2020.[6] In 2021, books published between 1 December 2018 and 1 December 2020 were eligible.[1]

Fiction winners

Works shortlisted for the fiction prize, 2008–2021
YearNomineeWorkResultRef.
2023C. A. DavidsHow to Be a RevolutionaryWon|[7][8][9][10]
Andrew BrownThe Heist Men
Siphiwe Gloria NdlovuThe Quality of Mercy
Yewande OmotosoAn Unusual Grief
Mark WinklerThe Errors of Dr Browne
2022Tshidiso MoletsaneJunxWon[11][12]
Karen JenningsAn Island
Joanne JosephChildren of Sugarcane
Thenjiwe MswaneAll Gomorrahs Are The Same
Damon GalgutThe Promise
2021Marguerite PolandA Sin of OmissionWon[1][13]
Dawn GarischBreaking Milk
Siphiwe Gloria NdlovuThe History of Man
Rešoketšwe ManenzheScatterlings
Mark WinklerDue South of Copenhagen
2020No award due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2019Siphiwe Gloria NdlovuThe Theory of FlightWon[14][15]
John HuntThe Boy Who Could Keep a Swan in His Head
Nozizwe Cynthia JeleThe Ones with Purpose
Claire RobertsonUnder Glass
Mark WinklerTheo & Flora
2018Harry KalmerA Thousand Tales of JohannesburgWon[16][17]
Maxine CaseSoftness of the Lime
S. J. NaudéThe Third Reel
Lesego RampolokengBird-Monk Seding
Francois SmithThe Camp Whore
2017Zakes MdaLittle SunsWon[18]
Bronwyn Law-ViljoenThe Printmaker
Kopano MatlwaPeriod Pain
Yewande OmotosoThe Woman Next Door
Mark WinklerThe Safest Place You Know
2016Nkosinathi SitholeHunger Eats a ManWon[19][20]
Alastair BruceBoy on the Wire
Craig HigginsonThe Dream House
Claire RobertsonThe Magistrate of Gower
Henrietta Rose-InnesGreen Lion
2015Damon GalgutArctic SummerWon[21][22]
Imraan CoovadiaTales of the Metric System
Masande NtshangaThe Reactive
Elaine ProctorThe Savage Hour
Zoë WicombOctober
2014Claire RobertsonThe Spiral HouseWon[3][23]
Lauren BeukesThe Shining Girls
Dominic BothaFalse River
Songeziwe MahlanguPenumbra
Eben VenterWolf Wolf
2013Karen JayesFor the Mercy of WaterWon[24][25]
Imraan CoovadiaThe Institute for Taxi Poetry
Steven Boykey SidleyEntanglement
Chris WadmanThe Unlikely Genius of Dr Cuthbert Kamazuma
James WhyleThe Book of War
2012Michiel HeynsLost GroundWon[26][27]
H.J. GolakaiThe Lazarus Effect
Henrietta Rose-InnesNineveh
Yewande OmotosoBom Boy
Adam SchwartzmannEddie Signwriter
2011Sifiso MzobeYoung BloodWon[28][29]
Shaida Kazie AliNot a Fairy Tale
James ClellandDeeper than Colour
Deon MeyerThirteen Hours
Ivan VladislavicDouble Negative
2010Imraan CoovadiaHigh Low In-betweenWon[30][31]
J. M. CoetzeeSummertime
Zinaid MeeranSaracen at the Gates
Kgebetli MoeleThe Book of the Dead
Sally-Ann MurraySmall Moving Parts
2009Anne LandsmanThe Rowing LessonWon[32][33]
Tracey FarrenWhiplash
Damon GalgutThe Impostor
Michiel HeynsBodies Politic
Mandla LangaThe Lost Colours of the Chameleon
2008Ceridwen DoveyBlood KinWon[34][35]
Justin CartwrightThe Song Before it is Sung
J. M. CoetzeeDiary of a Bad Year
Andrew GrayThe Fence
Niq MhlongoAfter Tears
2007Marlene van NiekerkAgaat (trans. Michiel Heyns)Won[36][37][38]
Imraan CoovadiaGreen-Eyed Thieves
Morabo MorojeleHow We Buried Puso
David MedalieThe Shadow Follows
2006Andrew BrownColdsleep LullabyWon[39][40][41]
J. M. CoetzeeSlow Man
André BrinkPraying Mantis
Russel BrownleeGarden of the Plagues
Consuelo RolandThe Good Cemetery Guide
2005Justin CartwrightThe Promise of HappinessWon[39]
2004Rayda JacobsConfessions of a GamblerWon[39]
2003André BrinkThe Other Side of SilenceWon[39]
2002Ivan VladislavicThe Restless SupermarketWon[39]
2001Zakes MdaThe Heart of RednessWon[39]

Non-fiction winners

Works shortlisted for the non-fiction prize, 2006-2023
YearNomineeWorkResultRef.
2023Bulelwa MabasaMy Land Obsession: A MemoirWon[7][8][9][10]
Liz McGregorUnforgiven: Face to Face with My Father’s Killer
André Odendaal, with editorial contributions by Albie SachsDear Comrade President: Oliver Tambo and the Foundations of South Africa’s Constitution
Matthew Wilhelm-SolomonThe Blinded City: Ten Years in Inner-City Johannesburg
Songezo ZibiManifesto: A New Vision for South Africa
2022Mignonne BreierBloody Sunday: The Nun, The Defiance Campaign and South Africa's Secret MassacreWon[11][12]
Tembeka NgcukaitobiLand Matters: South Africa's Failed Land Reforms and the Road Ahead
Imraan CoovadiaThe Poisoners: On South Africa's Toxic Past
Thula SimpsonHistory of South Africa: From 1902 to the Present
Johnny CleggScatterling of Africa: My Early Years
2021Andrew HardingThese Are Not Gentle PeopleWon[1][13]
Jacob DlaminiSafari Nation: A Social History of the Kruger National Park
Mark GevisserThe Pink Line: Journeys Across the World’s Queer Frontiers
Pieter-Louis MyburghGangster State: Unravelling Ace Magashule’s Web of Capture
Telita SnyckersDirty Tobacco: Spies, Lies and Mega-Profits
2020No award due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2019Terry KurganEveryone is Present: Essays on Photography, Family and MemoryWon[14][15]
Anneliese BurgessHeist! South Africa’s Cash-in-Transit Epidemic Uncovered
Panashe ChigumadziThese Bones Will Rise Again
Rekgotsofetse ChikaneBreaking a Rainbow, Building a Nation: The Politics Behind the #MustFall Movements
Sylvia NeameImprisoned: The Experience of a Prisoner Under Apartheid
2018Bongani NgqulungaThe Man Who Founded the ANC: A Biography of Pixley ka Isaka SemeWon[16][42]
Stuart DoranKingdom, Power, Glory: Mugabe, Zanu and the Quest for Supremacy (1960–87),
Thandeka GqubuleNo Longer Whispering to Power: The Story of Thuli Madonsela
Sisonke MsimangAlways Another Country: A Memoir of Exile and Home
Thuli NhlapoColour Me Yellow: Searching for My Family Truth
2017Greg MarinovichMurder at Small Koppie: The Real Story of the Marikana MassacreWon[18]
Sean ChristieUnder Nelson Mandela Boulevard: Life Among the Stowaways
Christa KulijanDarwin's Hunch: Science, Race, and the Search for Human Origins
Dikgang MosenekeMy Own Liberator: A Memoir
Steven RobinsLetters of Stone: From Nazi Germany to South Africa
2016Pumla Dineo GqolaRape: A South African NightmareWon[19][43]
David AttwellJ.M. Coetzee and the Life of Writing
Maxine CasePapwa: Golf's Lost Legend
Khaya DlangaTo Quote Myself: A Memoir
Charles van OnselenShowdown at the Red Lion
2015Jacob DlaminiAskari: A Story of Collaboration and Betrayal in the Anti-Apartheid StruggleWon[21][44]
Mark GevisserLost and Found in Johannesburg
Lindie KoortsDF Malan and the Rise of Afrikaner Nationalism
Maria PhalimePostmortem: The Doctor Who Walked Away
Jonny SteinbergA Man of Good Hope
2014Max du PreezA Rumour of Spring: South Africa after 20 Years of DemocracyWon[3][45]
Vusi Pikoli and Mandy WienerMy Second Initiation: The Memoir of Vusi Pikoli
Karen SchoemanPortrait of a Slave Society: The Cape of Good Hope 1717 – 1795
Elizabeth van HeyningenThe Concentration Camps of the Anglo-Boer War: A Social History
Shaun ViljoenRichard Rive: a Partial Biography
2013Redi TlhabiEndings and Beginnings: A Story of HealingWon[46][47]
Julian RademayerKilling for Profit
Jacques PauwRat Roads: One Man’s Incredible Journey
Xolela MangcuBiko: A Biography
Hermann GiliomeeThe Last Afrikaner Leaders
2012Hugh LewinStones Against the Mirror: Friendship in the Time of the South African StruggleWon[48][49]
Jonny SteinbergLittle Liberia: An African Odyssey in New York
Anton HarberDiepsloot
Mandy WienerKilling Kebble
Andrew FeinsteinThe Shadow World: Inside the Global Arms Trade
McIntosh PolelaMy Father, My Monster
2011Ronnie KasrilsThe Unlikely Secret AgentWon[50][49]
Adriaan BassonFinish and Klaar: Selebi’s Fall from Interpol to the Underworld
David Klatzow and Sylvia WalkerSteeped in Blood: The Life and Times of a Forensic Scientist
Jay NaidooFighting for Justice
Bill NassonThe War for South Africa: The Anglo-Boer War: 1899-1902
2010Albie SachsThe Strange Alchemy of Life and LawWon[30][31]
Kevin BloomWays of Staying
André BrinkA Fork in the Road
Antjie KrogBegging to be Black
James NgculuThe Honour to Serve: Recollections of an Umkhonto Soldier
2009Peter HarrisIn a Different TimeWon[51][33]
Andrew BrownStreet Blues: The Experiences of a Reluctant Policeman
Pippa GreenChoice, Not Fate: The Life and Times of Trevor Manuel
Ahmed Kathrada with Tim CouzensA Simple Freedom
Peter HarrisIn a Different Time: The Inside Story of the Delmas Four
2008Mark GevisserThabo Mbeki – The Dream DeferredWon[52][34][53]
George BizosOdyssey to Freedom
Charles van OnselenThe Fox and the Flies
2007Ivan VladislavicPortrait with KeysWon[54][55]
Glynis ClachertyThe Suitcase Stories
John AllenRabble-Rouser for Peace
Fred KhumaloTouch My Blood
Denis HirsonWhite Scars
2006Edwin CameronWitness to AIDSWon[39][41]
Adam LevinAidSafariWon
Antony AltbekerThe Dirty Work of Democracy: A Year on the Streets with the Saps
Ronald Suresh RobertsNo Cold Kitchen: A Biography of Nadine Gordimer
William N. ZuluSpring Will Come
2005Jonny SteinbergThe Number: One Man's Search for Identity in the Cape Underworld and Prison GangsWon[39]
2004Pumla Gobodo-MadikizelaA Human Being Died That NightWon[39]
2003Jonny SteinbergMidlandsWon[39]
2002Jonathan KaplanThe Dressing Station: A Surgeon's Chronicle of War and MedicineWon[39]
2001Henk van WoerdenA Mouthful of GlassWon[39]
2000Anthony SampsonMandela: The Authorised BiographyWon[39]
1999Antjie KrogCountry of My SkullWon[39]
Stephen ClingmanBram Fischer: Afrikaner RevolutionaryWon
1998John ReaderAfrica: A Biography of a ContinentWon[39]
1997Charles van OnselenThe Seed is MineWon[39]
1996Margaret McCordThe Calling of Katie MakanyaWon[39]
1995Nelson MandelaLong Walk to FreedomWon[39]
1994Breyten BreytenbachReturn to ParadiseWon[39]
1993Tim CouzensTramp RoyalWon[39]
1992Thomas PakenhamScramble for AfricaWon[39]
1991Albie SachsSoft Vengeance of a Freedom FighterWon[39]
1990Jeff PeiresThe Dead Will AriseWon[39]
1989Marq de VilliersWhite Tribe DreamingWon[39]

References