Danila Botha is a Canadian author and novelist. She has published two short story collections, with a third to be published in 2024 and two novels, with the second to be published in 2025.[1]
She volunteered with Na-me-res and Ve'ahavta, organizations benefiting the homeless, which inspired many of the short stories in Got No Secrets, her first book, published by Tightrope Books in Canada in May 2010, and Modjaji Books in South Africa in 2012. The stories, which deal with addiction, abuse, suicide, and childhood, are journeys into the private lives of twelve women.[3][4]
Botha has lived in South Africa, Ra'anana, Israel and Halifax, Nova Scotia, all of which informed her character's experiences in her debut novel.[5]Too Much on the Inside, which was published in May 2015 by Quattro Books, follows four newcomers to Toronto who struggle with their pasts, their new home and falling in love.[6][7]
Too Much on the Inside was reviewed by Quill and Quire Magazine,[8] The Literary Review of Canada,[9] and Book Clubbish.[10] Botha's novel was described as an "extraordinary...narrative, which... reveals a deep understanding of human nature."[8] and writing which contains "an admirable freshness and enthusiasm."[9] It won a Book Excellence Award for Contemporary Novel in 2016.[11] It was also short listed for the 2016 ReLit Award,[12] in the Novels Category.[13] It was optioned for film or episodic series by Pelee Entertainment in 2023. [14]
Her sophomore collection of short stories, For All the Men (and Some of the Women) I've Known, was published in October 2016 by Tightrope Books.[1][15] It received a starred review in Quill and Quire Magazine,[16] who called it her "most triumphant work to date." The Toronto Star praised her "fine talent for putting emphasis in unexpected places."[17] while the Globe and Mail praised the stories' "admirable directness and grit".[18] The Winnipeg Review praised her for "speaking smartly, even boldly... [and]repaint [ing] the stoic male canvasses of Cheever and Carver, but with a sensing, reflective affect"[19] In May 2017, it was a named a finalist[20] for the Trillium Book Award.[21] It was also short listed[22] for the Vine Award for Canadian Jewish Literature.[23] It will be reissued by Guernica Editions in 2025.[24]
Her new collection of short stories, Things That Cause Inappropriate Happiness, was published by Guernica Editions in April 2024. Stories from it have appeared in Canadian literary publications such as Humber Literary Review, the anthology Changing the Face of Canadian Literature, The Antigonish Review, Grain Magazine Jewishfiction.net and more, as well as American and European publications [25] The title story was nominated for a Pushcart Prize by Blank Spaces Magazine.[26]
The collection has been praised for exhibiting "Chekhovian humanism and pulsing empathy" by the Miramichi Reader,[27] as "compelling, highly readable and frequently relatable" by the Winnipeg Free Press,[28] and as "full of unmatched precision...illuminat[ing] truths about the world with economy and elegance" by Open Book.[29] The Literary Review of Canada described it as " Heartbreaking and sentimental, this collection contains elements of magical realism and eccentric, inquisitive prose" [30]while Great Lakes Review described it as "not operat{ing] within easily identifiable parameters... it’s not the mix of drama, humour, or quirkiness of some of the characters that makes Botha’s collection hard to classify...what is new or unexpected is the layer of subversiveness, a dark and satirical edge in certain narratives that goes beyond descriptions of young creatives consciously balking at conventional careers or familial expectations."[31] It was named byThe Toronto Star as one of Twenty-One Books to Put At the Top Of Your Reading List.[32] It was recently named a finalist for the Canadian Book Club Awards, (Canada's largest reader's choice awards) in the Anthology/Short Story Category.[33]
Her fifth book, and second novel, A Place For People Like Us will be published by Guernica Editions in 2025.[34]
She holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Guelph.[35] She has contributed to the National Post's the Afterword,[36] the 49th Shelf[37] The Hamilton Review of Books and was the Writer in Residence for Open Book in September 2016.[38] She was the 2021-2022 Writer in Residence at Toronto's Heliconian Club. She is a Creative Writing instructor at University of Toronto's School of Continuing Studies[39] and part of the faculty at Humber College's School for Writers.[40]
She lives in Toronto with her husband and kids.[2]