We vote for peace, as we speak and sing with grief
We vote for earth, as we plant clean waters and seeds of hope
Paula Green
25 the April 2026
A Day Like No Other: Selected Poems, James Norcliffe
Otago University Press, 2026
Treatment
for Ted Pearson
the clouds are moving
with surprising speed
in the window that is a lake
leaves are floating
the acupuncturist
so lightly holds my wrist
I am a centre of stillness
my wrist is a trout
the clouds like days
race across the leafy lake
somewhere a fin flickers
as regularly as a pulse
I float in the still shadows
soon I will tell him everything
James Norcliffe
from A Day Like No Other: Selected Poems
originally published in Letters to Dr Dee (Hazard Press, 1993)
Otago University Press has celebrated the poetry of James Norcliffe in A Day Like No Other, a lovingly designed, hardback edition of his selected poems. This is a gorgeous book to hold in the hand, with its feel-good paper stock, the beauty of the internal design and the choice of font. The poetry has room to breathe on the page and this makes such a difference.
Reading this collection, slowly over the course of weeks, is to savour myriad fascinations, reflections, observations. Things move in and out of view, stillness and silence as resonant as darkness and light, the strange and the ordinary. Humour. Wit. Especially humour and wit. I kept jotting down things to quote you, similes that hold my attention, the lyricism of a particular line, the allure of a gap. Imagine stars set like teeth in a rat poem. Or what a cow is to believe’. Or a willow tree that ‘was a prayer in the still air’.
To have a publisher pay such loving homage to a much loved poet, is a very fine thing indeed. this is a book to treasure.
Paula: I loved reading the selection of your poetry gathered from across the decades. I was drawn to the ongoing lyricism, the connecting fascinations, the wit, the humour, the acute observations. This could be the focus of a whole book on my part, but can you share any highlights, epiphanies, discoveries, challenges?
James: When Sue Wootton of Otago University Press suggested the possibility of doing a selected to me, I was delighted with the idea, especially as it offered the opportunity to revisit earlier work and bring to the light poems from books long out of print.
I was even more delighted when Sue explained that she envisioned a book with beautiful production standards, in hardback and with a ribbon. And, of course, she delivered in spades. I think it is a beautiful book.
One difficulty soon presented itself: there were an awful lot of poems to consider from eleven or so books.
When Joan (my wife Joan Melvyn co-selected with me) and I gathered together the poems we especially liked, there were, of course, far too many! My eyes far too big for my stomach. Sue was patient and explained the difference between ‘selected’ and ‘collected’. We needed to cull, but that became a very useful if sometimes painful exercise, forcing us to crystallise the criteria for selection. Among these were personal favourites, poems with specific resonance, poems that best demonstrated what was a James Norcliffe poem, poems that had been especially well received by audiences and readers, and poems that represented the whole range and breadth of the work, the aspects you list so kindly in your second sentence. Thus the selection with Sue’s assistance, became more of a distillation. I’m very happy with the result.
One problem we couldn’t overcome was that I have written a number of lengthy sequences over the years. I’m rather with Edgar Allan Poe that a long poem is a contradiction in terms, but I square that circle by writing shorter poems and stitching them together. I like the sequences but it would have been too extravagant to include them.
Perhaps the most cheerful discovery was how well so many of the early poems still stacked up given my more critical elderly eye.
Paula: We will have to go back to your books and hunt out the sequences. Spend time with the rewards of the long extended poetry breath. A different but equally satisfying pleasure for poetry fans.
Do you think anything has changed as you hold your writing pen? What or how or where or why you write poetry?
James: Not really. Poems usually come as fleeting visitations and I’ll try to catch a line as they flit past and write it down. I’ll then work at it and sometimes something develops. Sometimes – wonderfully – a whole poem will come at once, but this is rare. I don’t ever sit before a blank page to try to write a poem. It has to develop from a prompt of some sort: an image, a word or combination of words, a memory, something I’ve seen. This hasn’t changed really. I often quote the surrealist artist, Joan Miro, who once described drawing as ‘taking a line for a walk’. In many ways, for me, poetry is taking an idea for a walk. I love it when that walk takes me to strange or quirky places.
Why do I write? I’ve always wanted to. Now while it’s something that gives me great pleasure, it’s also something I feel compelled to do do, and I get such a buzz when I read a new poem and know that it works.
Paula: Walking has been such a aide for writers. It was for Blanche Blaughan. I get a sense of it in Michele leggott’s work.
I love how, from your early poems onwards, there are philosophical undercurrents. Whether it is the philosophy of soap or what a cow is to believe or, as fossils are scraped from the beach rocks, “to teach our children / the difficult meaning / of togetherness” is paramount. These over-and-undercurrents of ideas are gold. I particular love ‘The Visit of the Dalai Lama’ where the battered man (“life / has battered him / as a fish is battered”) is also doing the bright-side not-bad response: “papering himself / around with a warmth // that could steam windows”. Ah, I held this precious poem close.
What matters when you are writing a poem? Or to rephrase, what do you want your poetry to do? Can you choose an early poem you especially love and then a newer one to share with readers here.
James: The Bob that ‘The Visit of the Dalai Lama’ is dedicated to was an uncle of mine whose life was a succession of misfortunes and tribulations – rather a Job-like figure, but who through it all who maintained a sense of grace and warm humanity. The fish and chip analogy seemed to work on so many levels. I’m so pleased it spoke to you.
If I understand what you’re implying, it’s my hope that the poems express themselves without telling something or finger wagging. The poetry I most enjoy is layered, subtle, and often with playful ambiguity. I really hope that my poems often do the same.
I love finding odd juxtapositions that shouldn’t work, but do.
A couple of poems, early and late, that may demonstrate this would be ‘Treatment’ as you mention below and begin our conversation with, and secondly, ‘Four travellers in an Austin Maxi’, a poem dealing with memory and misapprehension.
Four travellers in an Austin Maxi
They sang it in the navy-blue (or brown?) Austin as it climbed over
the mountain.
They sang it on the white road through the gloom of the beech forest.
The white dust – or perhaps it was brown – billowed behind.
Sometimes I joined in: O Veederzane! Sweetheart!
A strange and haunting name, the promise of an impossible love, like
Marlene, like Mercedes under a lamplight in European mist.
One traveller remembers a road littered with handbags, another
antlered creatures in the trees, the third recalls the pink hot-water
bottle growing cold, the fourth remembers an idea.
A girl named Goodbye.How many times did I dream of her before I
said hello to you?
The sky would know. The blue sky – or perhaps the brown – the lost
sky somewhere high above the dust.
James Norcliffe
from A Day Like No Other: Selected Poems
originally published in Letters to ‘Oumuamua (Otago University Press, 2023)
Paula: So many poems to enthuse over. I love ‘treatment’ – so lyrical, so spare. It reminds me of the power of silence in a poem, the resonance of the gap, the unspoken. There is a sweet sway between movement and stillness, almost yin and yan veering in mind the scene is an acupuncturists. For me, it’s a poem rich in ideas and in feeling.
I float in the still shadows
soon I will tell him everything
Do you feel you signal and signpost rather than confess and expand upon the deeply personal.
James: I like ‘treatment’ very much as well, especially the unexpectedness (I hope) of the final couplet and the pulling together of images prompted by the somnolent state induced by lying silently on a clinic bed on a warm afternoon with a picture window to look out of.
I do of course have strong feelings but I prefer in my poetry to express these slant. To hint and suggest rather than shout – or whine. Deadpan, again, I guess. Images and figures can do much of the work and ambiguity. I do like poems that are layered this way.
Paula: I also love the recurring motifs. Especially frogs! Especially sky hills wind water. Do you find comfort in certain things finding their way into your poems?
James:Things do recur, sometimes too often. Joan often culls the white moons! But, yes, certain images and motifs become part of your idiolect, your personal language, and they’re worth embracing. We live in a part of the world surrounded by hills and water, wind from all directions and often astonishing skies. It’s one of the delights of Aotearoa and one shared by so many New Zealanders. I should add trees and birds as well – I’m a tree buff – and trees and birds regularly find their way into the poems, often as the main feature.
Paula: Two poems struck me deeply in these heartbreaking days: ‘The attack on Baghdad’ (where black peaches fell from the tree staining the sand with peach blood), and ‘How to dress for peace’. How do we write in these war-hungry times? Are you writing poetry as protest or solace or both?
James: These two poems were ones where my heart was more openly on my sleeve and they do resonate with people. ‘The attack of Baghdad’ has especial salience right now given the lunacy of the assault in Iran and it didn’t surprise me that Steve Braunias chose it to represent the book in Newsroom.
Several years ago, I read ‘How to Dress for Peace in Medellin, Colombia’ at the Twentieth International Poetry Festival which was dedicated to peace – unsurprisingly after the Pablo Escobar years. The poem was very well received.
Interestingly, my first published poetry was very politically involved. I wrote satirical pieces for an alternative little magazine called Kobald which had set up as a slightly subversive response to Canta, the official student magazine, at the University of Canterbury. They were little squibs, really, and also with the NZ Monthly Review, a left wing journal I subscribed to. A fellow contributor was David Eggleton. This was at the time of Vietnam so there was a lot to be political about. These days I don’t write such politically engaged work. Perhaps I ought to. I don’t hold with poets being unacknowledged legislators, but I do think we should bear witness. These are, as you say, war hungry times and also full of shouting and finger wagging. Poetry is better equipped to be more subtle, reflective, I feel.
Paula: Yes to bearing witness. I think Poetry Shelf hosts political nunces alongside protest placards. Are there particular poets that have sustained you, as you navigate poetry as both reader and writer?
James: I do read a lot of poetry. There are a number of poets, both classic and modern, I return to, probably because of the way they use language and because they have written poems I would love to be able to write – among the moderns and among dozens of others I might mention Derek Walcott, James Tate and Charles Simic, but honestly I could fill pages with names.
Paula: If you were able to curate a poetry reading inviting poets from any time or place who would you line up?
James: Oh, goodness. It would be a disparate bunch! I’d have to cut it down to half a dozen or so or it would go on all night.
How about John Donne, William Blake, Emily Dickinson, Sylvia Plath, W.H. Auden, Wallace Stevens, and Pablo Neruda. I’d like to squeeze in Yeats and a couple of hundred others.
Paula: I’m justr picturing the event. Wow! I find our poetry communities are thriving, despite the scant visibility in media or at festivals (Featherston is a notable exception). I love The Canterbury Poets Collective, the way it celebrates poets and poetry, both locally and from elsewhere. Exciting. Any thoughts on life as a poet in 2026?
James: The CPC is still going strong after more than thirty years and as popular as ever and locally, too, Catalyst and Common Ground have regular poetry events. Sudden Valley Press and Cold Hub Press maintain an extensive poetry list and local mags range from the venerable Takahē to Quick Brown Dog from the Hagley Writer Writers’ Institute. And for younger writers there is the Write-On School for Young Writers and of course the ReDraft series for young writers – national but based in Christchurch – has just published its twenty-fifth annual collection. To add icing, there is the wonderful Scorpio Bookshop with regular poetry launches. So, all in all, poetry is in good shape down here. As part of this environment, I find it hugely stimulating. Poets here are very supportive of one another and of their work and also keen to help up and coming writers find their feet.
Paula: Poetry has been such an important activity for many of us, whether as readers or writers or both. What else gives you comfort, stimulation, mind and heart boosts?
James: Family first, of course. We have a wonderful family, some alas overseas which is bittersweet, especially in these current times. Then there’s our garden: it’s large but still manageable, just, and so good for the soul. We enjoy travelling and discovering new places and connecting with new people and reconnecting with old friends. And images and ideas still flit past from time to time and I’m still adroit enough to grab some of them. It’s all rather lovely.
Paula: Thanks James. I raise my glass to your terrific selection of poems, so lovingly produced, so lovingly written over decades. It is poetry book I treasure.
James Norcliffe is a poet, children’s writer, novelist and editor. He was awarded the 2022 Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in Poetry and has published 11 poetry collections, most recently Letter to ’Oumuamua (Otago University Press, 2023). He is also the author of 14 novels for young readers, notably the award-winning Loblolly Boy series, and his first adult novel, The Frog Prince (RHNZ Vintage), was published in 2022. Norcliffe has a long association with the Canterbury Poets’ Collective, takahē, the ReDraft anthologies and Flash Frontier.
Otago University Press page

Event by Miri LB and Poetry Live!
cafe 39, 39 Ponsonby Road, Auckland
Poetry Live 12 May
Guest poet: Helen Rickerby
Guest musician: TBC
Emcee: Mikey Lim
Helen Rickerby lives in a cliff-top tower in Aro Valley, Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington. She has published five and a half collections of poetry, including the just-published My Bourgeois Apocalypse (Auckland University Press, 2026), a poetic collage-essay-memoir crafted out of (mostly) randomly selected sentences from her journals. Her previous collection, How to Live (AUP, 2019), won the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry at the 2020 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. Helen has a particular interest in what happens when poetry meets other forms, and in the possibilities of fragmented hybrid forms. She’s co-organised poetry conferences and literary events, and single-handedly ran Seraph Press – a boutique but significant publisher of New Zealand poetry. She earns a crust as an editor and technical writer.
There’s a bit more about the new book here
Opoutere Nest Song
Sky and water, quiet
sand. Little whistle
that gets up and goes.
Bill Manhire
from My Sunshine, VUP, 1996, and Collected Poems, VUP, 2001
Paula’s note: This poem resonates so acutely for me. I am transported to Te Henga Bethells Beach where the endangered dotterels also scutter and whistle.
Bill Manhire’s latest poetry collection is Lyrical Ballads, THWUP, 2026. He has won the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry five times, and was New Zealand’s inaugural poet laureate. He founded and directed the International Institute of Modern Letters at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington. He has edited major anthologies of New Zealand literature, including, with Marion McLeod, the now classic Some Other Country: New Zealand’s Best Short Stories (1984). In 2018 Bill was awarded an Icon Award Whakamana Hiranga from the Arts Foundation.
The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy stillness wonder movement of a poem.
Gap in My CV
I had this belt buckle with a picture of Karl Marx’s face on it. It was a real talking point, let me tell you. A big brass depiction of the beardy philosopher around my waist while I was in the supermarket, in the street, at the garden centre, drawing people’s eyes to me and making them think of the great currents of history.
So what happened was I was swimming in the lake one Saturday and someone stole my belt! I sprinted to the shore like one of those daft frogs that runs on water like someone’s electrocuting it, but the thief was hotfooting it away already. Well, what would you do? I threw on my trousers, held them up with one hand and chased the purloiner like an avenging spirit.
The thief was resourceful. He checked into spas and camouflaged himself in the mud baths, so I had to do the same, soaking in the hot, therapeutic slurry like some blissed-out predator. He’d go into a pub and disappear from view, so I’d have no choice but to order pints all day and watch the door to see if I could collar him when he made a break for it.
I did that for six months, and I was so tired at the end of it that I took a good long rest for another six months. So that’s what goes on my CV for late 2023 and early 2024, between ‘Office Oaf’ and ‘Sales Dick’. No, I didn’t get the belt back.
Erik Kennedy
from Sick Power Trip, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2025
‘Gap in my CV’ by Erik Kennedy
I reviewed Erik’s poetry collection Sick Power Trip for Radio NZ last year and immediately loved it. The poem that resonated with me the most, and which I really enjoy reading out loud to other people, is ‘Gap in My CV’.
The gap in the CV is a real-life dilemma for a lot of writers and other creative practitioners. Many of us find it hard to juggle the ‘day job’ with a creative career. Many creative projects take a lot of time, space and dedication to come through to completion. But, if you quit your job to write a book, will you ever get another job? Will potential employers look at your CV and ask why there’s a six-month gap, and will they still want to employ you if you say you were writing poems during that time? I am not sure if this is what was on Erik’s mind when he wrote this poem, but it’s what comes to my mind, and heart, when I read it. ‘Gap in My CV’ treats the subject with characteristic gusto, telling the story of a person who has to explain the gap between their roles as ‘office oaf’ and ‘sales dick’. As it turns out, they have been on a long, exhausting journey to find the thief who has stolen their Karl Marx belt buckle, which has taken six months, and they have then needed another six months to recover from it. The fact that it’s Karl Marx on the belt buckle gives the whole poem a beautiful underpinning of irony. It’s a poem sitting amongst other poems that deal with serious political subjects, sometimes with rage, often with humour. It’s a very generous collection. I feel seen by this poem, and by this book.
Airini Beautrais is a poet, writer and teacher based in Whanganui. Her most recent publication is the essay collection The Beautiful Afternoon (Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2024).
Erik Kennedy is the author of the poetry collections Sick Power Trip (2025), Another Beautiful Day Indoors (2022), and There’s No Place Like the Internet in Springtime(2018), all with Te Herenga Waka University Press, and he co-edited No Other Place to Stand, a book of climate change poetry from Aotearoa and the Pacific (Auckland University Press, 2022). He is the poetry editor of takahē and an adjunct fellow in English at the University of Canterbury. Originally from New Jersey, he lives in Ōtautahi Christchurch.
Te Herenga Waka University page
Growing Advice
At all costs avoid the twisted or winding pathways so often seen in the
small garden situated on the corner where two streets meet.
— THE COMPLETE NEW ZEALAND GARDENER
You can make it work if you’re at all
handy, hunkered and humble. It costs
only rain and the sun’s incandescence (avoid
hatless noons) along with the twisted
complicity of leafy time unwinding.
Bump the wheelbarrow up the pathway,
tread, rake, tease and weed so often
peas will bloom as soon as you’re seen in
flip-flops and crocuses flag your small
vernacular seasons because the garden
is making something of you, situated on
the border of dirt and thumb, the corner
with its stepover wall where two streets
grow neighbourly and flora and fauna meet.
Megan Kitching
Megan Kitching is an Ōtepoti Dunedin poet. Her debut collection At the Point of Seeing (Otago University Press, 2023) won the Jessie Mackay Prize for Poetry in the 2024 Mātātuhi Foundation Best First Book Awards and was awarded Best International First Collection in the UK Poet Laureate’s The Laurel Prize 2024. In 2021, Megan was the inaugural Caselberg Trust Elizabeth Brooke-Carr Emerging Writer in residence.
The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy wonder stillness of a poem.
We return downstairs for the first time in 2026 and welcome four brand new poets. Amy Marguerite, Anuja Mitra, Georgie Silk, and Sophie Van Waardenburg step under the glow in our first-ever Friday event. We invite you to the coziest poetry event in Auckland. Come and experience that unique Yellow Lamp flavor of poetry.
tickets here



THE BALLOON
Before it arrived, I dug up my garden.
I poured seeds over the new landscape;
packets that said ‘Wild Flowers of the World’,
‘Carpet of Blue’. My neighbour’s flax bushes
rustled and laughed. It seemed like I was
planning to build, dirt lines in a row.
Sedge remains blew across the ground
from the pile where I raked them. I thought of
my hair, single strands, pulled from brush pins and
moved over the floor by a vacuum with no suck.
Lurking in every corner of my bathroom.
I had ripped each native tree from the earth
to plant my flowering weeds.
The sun reflected on the tawa leaves
as if they knew that in time they would burn,
browned and curled in like wet receipts.
Their light a final scream at what I had done.
I wiped my hands on my jeans, but a coat
of smog had stained my fingers. Under the tap
it streamed down my arms.
Drops grew on my elbows, my garden’s blood.
A bird in the cabbage tree next door
chimed and I jumped: cold, caught.
I made out my neighbour, over twisted wire,
walking towards me, across his yard. It had to be,
cricket hat protruding from his head, dark smudge
above his lips. ‘Bury the evidence’ was my instinct.
“I’m going to cry,” he muffled from afar.
There was to be no song and dance,
was my second thought. I would tell him
I was building a new veranda. I listened back
in on the world as my neighbour said “sky”.
Repeated, “Look at the sky.” He pointed
behind me, arm veins like raised rivers on a globe.
It floated between our two yards; purple and
rubber I could smell; big as my neighbour’s yacht;
shadow a grounded kite, a hole to sink all my mess.
Like a bruise on a sick man, skin greyed,
coming up after falling from a height.
Unlike my garden, now a pit that would
only grow weeds, the balloon was marvellous
and my neighbour laughed. I imagined setting
it on fire: smiling, clutching gold.
An enemy’s head.
Tessa Keenan
Tessa Keenan (Te Ātiawa) is from Taranaki and now based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. You can find her writing in various Aotearoa publications including AUP New Poets 10, The Spinoff and Starling.
photo is by Craig Birch-Morunga
Jackson reads six poems and talks poetry
Jackson lives in Ōtepoti Dunedin. In 2021, they moved to Aotearoa from Australia, where Recent Work Press published their fourth poetry collection, A coat of ashes, based on their award-winning PhD thesis. In New Zealand, their poems have appeared in takahē, Turbine | Kapohau, Poetry Aotearoa Yearbook and other journals. They are on the committees of the New Zealand Poetry Society and Dunedin’s monthly poetry reading group Octagon Collective.
Website Facebook Instagram @thewriterjackson
‘Binding cradle — cradle bound’, Salvador Dalí (translated by Julian Levy) from Surrealist Love Poems, ed Mary Ann Caws, Tate Publishing 2002
‘A Song About the Moon’, Good Looks, Bill Manhire, Auckland University Press, 1982
‘Inheritance’, Georgia Agnew, in There are Rabbits Here, NZ Poetry Society, 2025 (poetry and haiku from the 2025 International Competition of the New Zealand Poetry Society | Te Rōpū Toikupu o Aotearoa)
‘The voice of Jackson’ from The emptied bridge, Mulla Mulla Press, 2019
‘A coat of ashes’ and ‘Wake’ from A coat of ashes, Recent Work Press, 2019





National Poetry Day enters a bold new chapter in 2026
Phantom Billstickers and the New Zealand Book Awards Trust Te Ohu Tiaki i Te Rau Hiringa are celebrating a landmark decade of partnership as Phantom transitions from its role as principal sponsor of National Poetry Day to a focused mission of street-level poetry advocacy.
After ten years of generous and creative support from the country’s most innovative street poster company, this evolution marks a new phase for both organisations.
Held each August since 1997, National Poetry Day is one of Aotearoa New Zealand’s most visible and vibrant literary celebrations, with more than 100 events taking place across the motu each year. The New Zealand Book Awards Trust confirms that the event will take place again in 2026, while the Trust works to secure new funding.
Phantom Billstickers has been the day’s principal sponsor since 2016, a role inspired by the deep personal passion of Phantom founder, the late Jim Wilson. While the principal sponsorship concludes, Phantom is doubling down on its foundational mission: bringing the written word directly to the people where it can be experienced by everyone.
“Our association grew from Jim’s belief that poetry belongs on the streets,” says Phantom CEO Robin McDonnell. “As we look to the future, we want to return to that purest form of support. For us, the street remains the ultimate stage. Placing poems on posters is where we create the most visceral impact, and that is a commitment we will keep forever.”
Phantom will continue to champion New Zealand’s poets by featuring the annual Ockham New Zealand Book Awards poetry finalists on its posters, while also using its extensive network to provide a platform for the next generation of up-and-coming voices.
The New Zealand Book Awards Trust’s poetry spokesperson Richard Pamatatau says Phantom’s contribution has been transformative.
“Phantom’s commitment has helped National Poetry Day become a truly nationwide cultural moment every late August. Their support brought poetry not only into venues and across social media, but also onto streets and walls of our cities. We acknowledge their partnership with deep gratitude and are delighted that Phantom will continue to lend their ‘street voice’ to ensure poetry remains unstoppable and accessibleto all New Zealanders.”
Scheduled for Friday 28 August 2026, National Poetry Day 2026 will proceed in a streamlined format, powered by the robust foundation built over the last decade. Events will be promoted nationally through the National Poetry Day website and social media. While seed funding will not be available in 2026, organisers are warmly encouraged to plan self-funded events and share details of these for inclusion in the national listings and promotion.
“National Poetry Day has always been powered by the energy and support of the poetry community itself,” says Richard. “That spirit remains unchanged.”
The Trust is now seeking a new principal sponsor to help shape the next chapter of this long-running, high-profile national celebration.
National Poetry Day offers a unique opportunity to align with a nationwide cultural moment — one in which grassroots writers share the stage with award-winning authors, emerging voices appear alongside the Poet Laureate, and communities across Aotearoa gather to listen, speak and connect.
Organisations interested in discussing partnership opportunities are invited to contact the NZ Book Awards Trust at supportus@nzbookawards.org.nz.
Poetry Shelf online Cafe Reading for Poetry Day 2025
S P The Poet

National Library Poetry Day event 2025