


Christchurch Feminist Poets presents an evening of spoken word poetry that will move you, inspire you and make you think about society today and the ongoing struggle for equality. Bringing together a stellar group of Christchurch’s most powerful and thought provoking poets, this event is a unique opportunity to hear a cross section of voices, all driven to make the world a better place. Featuring Tusiata Avia, Ray Shipley, Alice Anderson, Rebecca Nash and Isla Martin, this event will immerse the audience in poetry that is as diverse as it is uplifting.

Here are the three poet judges judging the poetry section:
Finalists and the ultimate winner in the Poetry category will be selected by three acclaimed poets: creative writing teacher Airini Beautrais; Massey University Associate Professor Bryan Walpert; and Karlo Mila, who runs an indigenous leadership programme and whose collection Dream Fish Floating won the Jessie Mackay Best First Book Award for Poetry in 2015.
Full details here


read winning entries here
Judge’s report, 2018 WriteNow poetry competition.
“Alive here and now”
Voice is like a muscle: it can lift and move and touch. A powerful voice need not be loud (although it may be loud); it may be quiet and gentle. A powerful voice comes from a listening place, which also tends to be a compassionate place. A powerful voice chooses words carefully, understanding that language represents our deepest humanity, that what we say and how we say it shapes everything we are, and creates all that we can be.
I said, when this year’s competition opened, that I’d be looking for poems that connect me to the poet’s vision of what it means to be alive, here and now, in Ōtepoti/Dunedin. It’s been my privilege to read the response to that call-out in so many strong, vivid and well-made poems.
The overall standard of writing was high. These young poets clearly respect the power of poetry. They understand that a poem is made, and they know the importance of the work that goes into binding together the poem’s component parts and polishing every line until the whole poem pleases eye, ear, mind and heart. I want to congratulate everyone who entered and encourage you to continue to hone your writing talents. It was great to have entries from several schools new to the competition, and exciting to find students from two of these schools – Queens High School and Kaikorai College – named in the results.
Special congratulations now to the poets who have been commended or placed. Your work was tightly crafted and distilled; your lines carry exactly what they need to bear – no more and no less. Because of this, they did that extra thing I was looking for, used the amazing energy of language to “make a poem that rings true, and keeps on getting truer with each reading”. In the senior section, I could not separate two poems that stood out as particularly strongly realised visions of being “alive, here and now”, and so have awarded equal first place to Jacob Cone (Kaikorai College) and Molly Crighton (Columba College).
Molly Crighton deserves extra-special mention – her poetry has been placed and commended in every WriteNow competition since she first entered as a year 9 student in 2014, the inaugural year the of the competition. Hats off to you Molly!
Thank you all for writing these poems. Write more, weave the world with words. Power to your pens.
Sue Wootton, August 2018
RESULTS
Junior section:
First: ‘Dysfunctional Placentae’ by Poppy Magdalena Hayward, Year 10 Logan Park High School.
Second: ‘A Blank Canvas’ by Megan Macdiarmid, Year 10 Logan Park High School.
Third: ‘Time’ by Chloe E. Heineke, Year 10, Columba College.
Commended:
‘St Clair’ by Billie Allan, Year 9, Queens High School
‘Dunedin’ by Billie Allan, Year 9, Queens High School
‘The Esplanade’ by Lydia Butler, Year 9, Queens High School
Senior section:
First equal: ‘Chrysalis ‘by Jacob Cone, Year 13 Kaikorai Valley College.
First equal: ‘The Innernet’ by Molly Crighton, Year 13 Columba College.
Third: ‘A story for you, love’ by Oscar Tobeck, Year 11, Kaikorai Valley College
Commended:
‘to the spider on my ceiling’ by Molly Crighton
‘Triple-sunned sky’ by Molly Crighton
‘Holey’ by Lucy Liebergreen, Year 13, Columba College
‘A stardust puzzle’ by Jacob Cone
it was the seventies when me & Karen Carpenter hung out
*
(cream)
me & Karen Carpenter
blu-tacked heartthrobs
to the hangout
wall & laid down
under our own gatefold
smiles. The ridges of our mouths
tasted like corduroy & the hangout
door was a polygon of un-hinged
ultra-violet. We stole lines from stones
& rolled them like acid
checkers on each
other’s tongues, testing
the discs of our tucked spines as we
swallowed. We rippled all through
the magazines: there were morsels of cosmetic
Top Tip to live on. We loaded our skin
& rubbed in the limits like cream, microscoped
for layouts of handbag & muscle. We could
not switch off the mirrors: it turned out
since me & Karen C
were kids we’d sucked on dolls cross
legged & shaved their limbs
to size with the
zip of our teeth. Somewhere
our mothers had bleach
dreams. We lay & grinned
on the oblong of leftover
shagpile. The seventies tasted
like orangeade, like groovy wars & honeybrown
explosions in the wallpaper. Karen
Carpenter held my hand & walked me
through the detonating spirals.
She showed me where
we could feast
on tangerine horizons
©Tracey Slaughter
Tracey Slaughter is the author of deleted scenes for lovers an acclaimed collection of short stories (VUP, 2016). Her poetry and prose have received many awards including the international Bridport Prize (2014), two BNZ Katherine Mansfield Awards, and the Landfall Essay Prize 2015. Her poetry cycle ‘it was the seventies when me & Karen Carpenter hung out’ was shortlisted in the Manchester Poetry Prize 2014, and her poem ‘breather’ won Second Place in the ABR Peter Porter Poetry Prize 2018. She teaches at Waikato University where she edits the journal Mayhem.

The Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship Advisory Committee is looking for an established creative writer to spend three months or more in Menton in southern France to work on a project or projects.
Tihe Mauriora, e nga iwi o te motu, anei he karahipi whakaharahara. Ko te Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship tenei karahipi. Kia kaha koutou ki te tonohia mo tenei putea tautoko. Mena he tangata angitu koe i tenei karahipi, ka taea e koe haere ki te Whenua Wiwi ki te whakamahi to kaupapa, kei te mohio koe, ko te manu i kai i te matauranga nona te ao. Ko koe tena?
Details here

From RNZ:
We’re getting listeners to download our Voxpop app onto their smartphones and read a two minute poem so we can play it on air during the show all week.
If you write poems and would like to read one to be heard on Lately with Karyn Hay next week on RNZ National, we’d love to hear it. Download the RNZ Voxpop App from the Appstore or wherever you get your apps, and read a short poem of up to two minutes onto it. Simple as that. Make sure you say who you are, and what it’s called and – if you like, other deets such as where it’s been published. Karyn will play it on air next week on her show. We already have lots of poems to play, some from published authors, others from complete novices. Have a go! And please, share away!!
Instructions for the app:
1. To download the VoxPop app search for “RNZ VoxPop” in the app store on your iPhone or android phone.
You can find also find the app here:
2. Give yourself a username and give the app permission to use the microphone.
3. Select the question you wish to answer and it will bring up the microphone to begin recording.
4. Touch the microphone in the red circle to begin recording and then touch it again to end recording. You can “replay” to listen back and if you are happy hit the “publish” button to send the reading to us.
If you have any issues or questions email me: ceinwen.curtis@radionz.co.nz
National Poetry Day
