AUT – Visiting Writers Programme: Helen Rickerby

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Tuesday 13 September, 1-2pm

WT1501, City Campus

The Visiting Writers Programme connects you to experienced authors and publishers, giving you the opportunity to engage in discussions with them about the production of their work. The next session in the series features acclaimed poet, Helen Rickerby.

Helen Rickerby has published four collections of poetry, most recently Cinema (Mākaro, 2014), which took its inspiration from films and film-making. Previous collections include Heading North (Kilmog Press, 2010) a poem sequence that road-trips from Wellington to Cape Rēinga; My Iron Spine (Headworx, 2008), which features biographical poems about women from history; and Abstract Internal Furniture (HeadworX, 2001), in which the mythic and the everyday meet. She’s currently working on her next collection (working title: How to Live), in which she attempts to grapple with the big philosophical issues, but does not promise to answer them.

Helen is the managing editor of Seraph Press, a boutique poetry publisher she founded in 2004, which has to date published 16 books, with more on the way. She was one of the founders of JAAM literary magazine in 1995, and has been co-managing editor since 2005. She has been involved in organising many literary events, including Truth or Beauty, a conference about biographical poetry (2014), and the inaugural Ruapehu Writers Festival, held in Ohākune in March 2016.

She lives in Wellington’s Aro Valley in a cliff-top tower and works mainly as a web editor.

Applications invited for 2016 Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship

Established and mid-career New Zealand writers are invited to apply for the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship 2016.

The Fellowship is one of New Zealand’s longest-standing and most prestigious literary opportunities. In 2016 it offers a residency of three months or more in Menton, France during 2017 and an allowance of NZ$35,000 to cover return travel to France and living and accommodation expenses.

The support of the city of Menton enables a New Zealand author to work at the Villa Isola Bella, where Katherine Mansfield lived and wrote during the latter part of her life.

Applications are sought from established writers across all genres of creative writing: fiction, poetry, literary non-fiction, children’s fiction and playwriting.

Since it was established in 1970, there have been 45 recipients of this fellowship including Janet Frame, Michael King, Lloyd Jones, Witi Ihimaera, Vincent O’Sullivan, Bill Manhire, Ian Wedde, Elizabeth Knox, Dame Fiona Kidman, Jenny Pattrick, Ken Duncum, Mandy Hager and the 2015 recipient, Anna Jackson.

The Fellowship is administered by the Arts Foundation of New Zealand and supported by Creative New Zealand.

Applications close at 5pm on Friday 23 September 2016

How to apply

September 21st: Selina Tusitala Marsh’s Lounge Reading list

MEGA-READING AT OGH LOUNGE 21 September, 5.30-7 PM
ALL WELCOME!

LOUNGE #52 Wednesday 21 September
Old Government House Lounge, UoA City Campus, Princes St and Waterloo Quadrant, 5.30-7 pm

MC Selina Tusitala Marsh
Helen Sword
Caitlin Smith
Lanicia Chang
Gina Cole
Fiona Stevens
Faga Tuigamala
Ken Arkind
Tusiata and Sepela Avia
MIT Spoken Word Students
Alys Longley and the Eleventeen Collective

Free entry. Food and drinks for sale in the Buttery. Information Michele Leggott  m.leggott@auckland.ac.nz  or 09 373 7599 ext. 87342. Poster: http://www.nzepc.auckland.ac.nz/events/lounge52_poster.pdf

The LOUNGE readings are a continuing project of the New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre (nzepc), Auckland University Press and Auckland University English, Drama and Writing Studies,  in association with the Staff Common Room Club at Old Government House.

LOUNGE READINGS #51-53: 10 August, 21 September, 19 October 2016

Double pass for Sunday’s session of Going West up for grab

(Sue Orr, Paula Green, Renee Liang, Himali McInnes, & Giovanni Tiso will be there along with Roger Shepherd & John Campbell and more)

WIN A DOUBLE PASS FOR SUNDAY! Comment on the Facebook post and tag a friend you’d like to bring with you. We’ll draw the winner from a hat on Friday night. From migrant fiction to women’s history, poetry to the future of journalism, and ending with a bang – Flying Nun & craft beer – Sunday will be filled with intellectual and sensory delights!

Books & Writers Weekend September 2016 Sunday 11th

2017 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards judges announced

ockhamThe 2017 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards will be judged by 12 eminent academics, writers, journalists, librarians, curators, commentators and booksellers from around New Zealand, it is announced today.

For the first time, an international judge has also been invited to take a seat at the fiction ‘table,’ assisting the local judges of the Acorn Foundation Literary Award and taking the total number of judges to 13. The name of the international judge will be revealed early next year.

There are four Awards categories: The Acorn Foundation Literary Award (for Fiction), Poetry, General Non-Fiction and Illustrated Non-Fiction. The judges will also award a Best First Book Award in each category. A Māori language adviser will judge the Māori Language Award.

The judges will announce their longlist on November 22, 2016, and their shortlist on March 07 2017.

New Zealand Book Awards Trust chairwoman Nicola Legat says “the experience and range of our 13 judges is superb, and we look forward to their longlist decisions.”

The $50,000 Acorn Foundation Literary Award will be judged by the yet-to-be-named international judge; former Director of the Auckland Writers Festival and Creative New Zealand literature adviser Jill Rawnsley; highly-regarded bookseller from UBS Otago Bronwyn Wylie-Gibb; and esteemed writer and co-founder of the Auckland Writers Festival Peter Wells.

The Poetry Prize will be judged by eminent Wellington poet and Professor at Victoria University Harry Ricketts; Chicago-born poet and 2016 Writer in Residence at The University of Waikato Steven Toussaint; and poet, playwright and fiction writer Vivienne Plumb.

The General Non-Fiction Prize will be judged by Metro books editor and former bookseller Susanna Andrew; writer and academic Professor Tom Brooking of the University of Otago; and Wellington writer, commentator and trade unionist Morgan Godfery.

The Illustrated Non-Fiction Prize will be judged by writer, historian and Curator Mäori at the Alexander Turnbull Library Paul Diamond; Associate Professor and Director of the Centre for Art Studies at the University of Auckland Linda Tyler; and Bronwyn Labrum, Head of New Zealand and Pacific Cultures at the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and 2016 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards finalist for Real Modern.

“Judging these prestigious and significant awards is a major commitment,” says Nicola Legat. “We are hugely appreciative of the time and expertise these busy people bring to the judging process. We look forward to their longlist, shortlist and winner selections being announced.”

The winners will be announced on May 16 2017, at the opening night event of the Auckland Writers Festival.

Entries to the 2017 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards can be made via here. Books published between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2016 are eligible for entry.

Mimicry – a new journal for friends

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Holly Hunter has edited a new journal of work by her friends. Mimicry includes poetry, prose, art and nonfiction (and more!). In her preface, Holly declares this issue is an act of nepotism because the contributors are her ‘incredibly talented and creatively driven friends.’ She says : ‘I wanted to collect them like Weet-Bix trading cards and publish them, so here we are.’

Bravo! I love this idea.  I do hope another poet decides to come up with a collection based on his or her own friendships and biases. Most names I don’t recognise (what a treat!) but Nina Powles and Hera Lindsay Bird jumped out at me.

This is a good read. Yes! Holly Hunter I am ‘walking away cradling something far more than I paid for it.’

 

from ( a new and wonderful discovery) Russell Coldicutt’s ‘Translators’ Note’

 

‘These worms are glowworms hanging from the roofs

of our mouths, and we can never really be sure

if they light up when out lips seal them in.’

 

I especially love Nina Powles’s prose piece, ‘Hungry girls’:

‘I’ve been learning Chinese for three years now but there are still many days when language fails me, when it feels like food is all that ties me to this home my family brought to me from far away.’

 

And Jake Arthur’s  ‘He in the harp’:

 

‘I watch him play his sad instrument.

It feels wrong to play a harp in the garage.’

 

Or Miriam Looij’s ‘Premonition’

 

‘I don’t think its that cool to like Ginsburg anymore, but I’m still jealous of him.’

 

And a taste of Hera Lindsay Bird’s twitchety prose piece:

‘Every time I have my heart broken I become stupid and tolerable. I look at plants and animals and cry. To be honest, it’s a relief. When I am in a relationship I forget how to be a person. I stand around asking people how they are, like a lonely bank teller.’

 

Mimicry details here

You can purchase here

or at Vic Books and Unity Books in Wellington

Great! Gregory O’Brien talks to Kim Hill about Hera Lindsay Bird

 

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Some people really love it -some people really hate it

The book might appeal to spinsters

Average age at her launch … 22

 

The average age at Writers and Readers … 60

 

There’s hyperbole going on

They’re very literary and very relaxed

She goes to town with similes

 

There’s a charm to it and an anarchy to it

These poems can be quite shocking

There’s lots of sex and death

Lots more sex than death

 

Makes me think of Frank O’Hara

Is this just theatre, is this just writing

It’s amazing to read cover to cover

because it’s so full of shots/shocks

 

Here’s the one where she goes insane

With the similes

Some are fairly genius

 

She is a great maker of imagery

Sometimes you feel like it might have been flung

at her from the internet

 

She seems to have taken people by the scruff

of the neck, she’s come out of nowhere

 

Here’s poetry making a dramatic

and high octane comeback

 

 

 

Listen here

(plus Hera reading a few poems -her voice melodic, soft, soothing – whatever the subject matter)

 

Laurence Fearnley’s new novel – a taste of my review

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The Quiet Spectacular
Laurence Fearnley
Penguin, $38

‘Laurence Fearnley’s new novel is a lovely read, a moving read.

Three women are the heart of the book: Loretta, Chance and Riva. We meet them individually, but their lives overlap and begin to knot together. It is a novel of so many things — friendship, dangerous women, smothering mothers, dutiful daughters, undutiful daughters, land care, books.

It is a novel of ideas and it is a novel of empathy.’

 

My review is published today in the Press and The Dominion. For my complete review go here.

I love this book. I love its slowness and its penetrating heart. The title is a perfect fit.

This morning when I was shedding glumness, I decided a daily dose of the quiet spectacular is a necessary balm. Just looking out at the rolling sea mist and the tail of the Waitakere ranges and the spiky nikau. That will do. Or a novel like this.

Interview on Standing Room Only.

New Voices, Emerging Poets Results 2016

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Michelle and Iva, winning emerging poets

This event, steered by Siobhan Harvey, has become an annual event in Auckland on National Poetry Day. Check out the winning poems by following the link. Both terrific!

 

 

The 2016 Divine Muses XIII : evening of poetry was this year MC’d by Linda Tyler, Director of the Centre for Art Studies at The University of Auckland. The University’s Gus Fisher Gallery with its beautiful stainglass dome provided the wonderful venue for the readings.

Linda Tyler welcomed and invited this year’s stellar line up of poets to read from a selection of their own poems. Vivienne Plumb, current writer in residence at the Michael King centre in Devonport, read first; followed by Riemke Ensing, Maris O’Rourke, Siobhan Harvey, Jenny Bornholdt, and Gregory O’Brien.

At the close of readings the winners of the 2016 NEW VOICES – Emerging Poets Competition were announced by judge Vana Manasiadi. Michelle Chote and Iva Vemic then read their winning poems. Unity Books of High Street kindly donated the book prizes for this year’s winners.

The last event of the evening was the launch of two new letterpress broadsheets. Limited Poetry Broadsheets were introduced last year by the organisers to help raise funds to support New Voices. The two new broadsheets were printed by Wellington letterpress printer Brendan O’Brien of Fernbank Studio. They featured poems by Gregory O’Brien and Jenny Bornholdt. Click here for further details

The winner is  Michelle Chote and runner up is Iva Vemic.

 

 

New Voices, Emerging Poets Judge’s Report, 2016 (Vana Manasiadis)

I loved reading the entries for this year’s competition; it was an honour and a privilege to be entrusted with voices that took me to places as diverse as K road, Jerusalem, Santiago, Pike river, Prague and Kakamatua; and allow me presence during conversations with New Zealand poet elders, Denis Glover, Lauris Edmond; and American, Marge Piercy, Susan Howe. In all the poems I read, there was a magic and transport, and for me that is always the most important thing. I looked forward to reading the entries while I was still in Crete trying to find the threads myself, the connections in my case between words in different languages. And I thought about the words ‘language’ and ‘translation’ a lot – and certainly poetry contains a multiplicity of languages: of image, of sound, of turn, of contact. So when I finally got my hands on the entries, I looked for these different languages and their relationships to each other; and ultimately, to the translations. How was lonliness, love, loss being translated, sculpted and crafted and being offered to me, the reader, as something transformed? Water was a recurrring theme in this year’s entries, as was journey, and moving relationships with the dead and the living. So, fluidity, and arrival. I read the entries many times until I arrived myself at the shortlisted ten which succeeded particularly well in translating ideas of arrival, journey, surprise; and which showed deft use of the many languages of poetry. And I especially congratulate these poets tonight.

Highly Commended: I chose three highly commended poems this year, and the first of these is ‘Poppa’s Boat’, by Christel Jeffs, for the moving way themes of loss (of a beloved person, of childhood) and love, are evoked via turn and meticulous crafting. All five senses are alerted in this poem to memorable effect, the voice is authentic and assured, and it tells a story of presence, absence, presence in absence that is relateable, and felt true.

The second highly commended is ‘Home Thoughts, after Denis Glover’s poem’, by Annabel Wilson, a poem that insisted itself upon me. There’s a quiet confidence in the poem, a humility and ability to step back and let the images do the talking, that impressed me. The sustained image of the line drew me in and kept replenishing itself, and the implied dialogue with the poem’s inspiration, Glover’s ‘Home Thoughts’ pointed to the something bigger in poetry, to the community of voices.

The third highly commended is ‘Shoe Pads’, by Linda Lew, which was both delicate and dynamic in its treatment of the grandmother protagonist. The camera here pans wide and close in turns, as enormous historic events are checked by the grandmother’s quiet acts of love and shielding. I walked alongside her as she walked through decades of change, from Beijing to New Zealand. Always direct, never sentimental, she was kind and sturdy company.

Finalist: The second place goes to ‘A poem a day’, by Iva Vemich which, with its pace, choric repetitions, and surprising leaps of imagination made for memorable reading. I read this poem as a poem-essay, a poem that asks a question and shows its workings – in this case, ‘will poetry rescue’ (the poet, the community going about its daily business)? The responses – wry and perhaps a little ironic, but in a good way – were unexpected and evocative, and I was thrilled by many of the line breaks, and stream of consciousness connections.

Winner of the 2016 New Voices Competition:  The winning entry tonight is ‘A colonised woman speaks’ by Michelle Chote. This was one of the first poems I read, and it absolutely refused to slip away quietly. It kept calling with its layers of polemicism and consonant crash. In this poem, expression is not the means to an ends, but the thing itself – the syllables and the hollows a body allows us. So tongue, air, taste and belly establish the organic imagery, embody fury and revolt in lines like ‘dash dipthongs at the drop of a beret’. Listen for the ending which is a perfect coming together of sense and sound. Having read the poem aloud several times in an effort to absorb the sound effects, I’m particularly excited to hear this powerful poem read tonight in this beautiful space, as the winner of this year’s competition.

Vana Manasiadis