A
landmark book – New Zealand’s Native Trees by John Dawson and Rob Lucas
– has won the country’s supreme publishing accolade, The New Zealand Post Book
of the Year.
The book -
which took seven years, more than 100,000 four-wheel-drive kilometres and
countless hours’ walking in dense forest to complete - was presented with the
honour by the Hon. Christopher Finlayson, Minister for Arts, Culture &
Heritage at a gala dinner ceremony in Auckland tonight.
New Zealand
Post Book Awards judges convenor, Chris Bourke said on behalf of the judging
panel that New Zealand’s Native Trees is a masterly example of
publishing of the kind that is seen only once in a generation.
“From the
detailed and authoritative research, accessible and comprehensive writing,
detailed yet expansive photography, near flawless editing, design and layout
this is a quality book from start to finish. Its impact on the community and on
generations to come is self-evident.”
The book
contains more than 2,300 photographs, many of which took photographer Rob Lucas
several visits to some of the country’s most inaccessible areas to capture. The
book also won the Illustrated Non-Fiction Category.
Internationally
recognised novelist and creative writing teacher, Paula Morris (Ngati Wai) is
this year’s New Zealand Post Book Awards Fiction Category winner for her work, Rangatira.
The
historical novel which is based on Morris’ tupuna (ancestor), Paratene Te
Manu’s 1863 visit to England, was exhaustively researched.
Mr Bourke said the judges were
impressed by the refreshing purity of purpose to Morris’ story-telling.
“It never seems jaded or cynical or
calculating; instead the struggle to comprehend otherness is rendered
perceptively, directly, consistently — and compellingly.”
Sue Orr,
former speechwriter to Governor-General Dame Silvia Cartwright, took this
year’s People’s Choice Award for her short story collection, From Under the
Overcoat. The award is much-coveted by authors as a reflection of their
book’s popularity.
Journalist,
playwright, author and producer Chris Winitana (Ngati Tuwharetoa and Ngai
Tuhoe) was presented with the New Zealand Post Māori Language Award for his
book, Tōku Reo, Tōku Ohooho : My Language, My Inspiration; a
book that explores the struggle to save the Māori language over the last 40
years.
New Zealand
Post Book Awards judge and Māori language advisor, Paora Tibble said that as a
te reo Māori publication, Tōku Reo, Tōku Ohooho is groundbreaking.
“Chris
Winitana mixes traditional language with modern metaphors. He shows te reo
Māori as a living language; creating new contexts for words and phrases
buried in our not too distant past. His knowledge of te reo is remarkable.
“With this
book, Chris Winitana takes us on the adventure of a lifetime. For 40
years, Māori have fought to revitalise their language. This is their
story.”
Rhian Gallagher's second collection, Shift, which encompasses a departure from London where she lived for 18 years, and a return to New Zealand, her country of birth, won the Poetry Category Award.
Rhian Gallagher's second collection, Shift, which encompasses a departure from London where she lived for 18 years, and a return to New Zealand, her country of birth, won the Poetry Category Award.
Mr
Bourke commented that Rhian Gallagher’s collection was an example of lyrical
poetry at its very best.
“The poems
offer elegance, mysteriousness, musical harmonies, satisfying quietness and
subtle emotions. Sounds and themes stitch the collection with an assured and
unifying touch. You fall upon little autobiographical traces in the shadows,
traces that are both moving and intense.”
Historian
and novelist, Joan Druett won the General Non-Fiction Category Award for her
work, Tupaia: The Remarkable Story of Captain Cook’s Polynesian Navigator.
“Tupaia’s
richly detailed drawings and paintings are a precious legacy and are stunningly
reproduced in a book which will intrigue and inspire. Everything about Tupaia
reflects Druett’s careful research and passion for her subject.
“This is a
wonderful book.”
The
full list of 2012 New Zealand Post Book Awards winners is as follows:
New
Zealand Post Book of the Year winner:
New
Zealand’s Native Trees by John Dawson & Rob Lucas (Craig
Potton Publishing)
Fiction
Award winner:
Rangatira by Paula Morris
(Penguin Group, NZ)
Poetry
Award winner:
Shift by Rhian
Gallagher (Auckland University Press)
General
Non-Fiction Award winner:
Tupaia:
The Remarkable Story of Captain Cook’s Polynesian Navigator by Joan Druett
(Random House NZ)
Illustrated
Non-Fiction Award winner:
New
Zealand’s Native Trees by John Dawson & Rob Lucas (Craig
Potton Publishing)
Māori
Language Award winner:
Tōku
Reo, Tōku Ohooho : My Language, My Inspiration by Chris
Winitana (Huia Publishers)
People’s
Choice Award winner:
From Under the Overcoat by Sue Orr (Vintage, Random House NZ)
The New
Zealand Post Book of the Year Award winner received $15,000. The Māori Language
Award winner and the winners of the four Category Awards each received $10,000
and the People’s Choice Award winner $5,000.
The
winners of the 2012 New Zealand Society of Authors (NZSA) Best First Book
Awards - announced earlier this year - were also honoured tonight. They are:
NZSA
Hubert Church Best First Book Award for Fiction: Hamish Clayton for Wulf (Penguin Group, NZ).
NZSA
Jessie Mackay Best First Book Award for Poetry: John Adams for his
collection Briefcase (Auckland University Press).
NZSA
E.H. McCormick Best First Book Award for Non-Fiction: Michael
Smythe for New Zealand by Design (Random House, NZ)
Each
NZSA Best First Book Awards category winner received $2,500.
Looking forward to reading the Morris. And following the awards on Twitter, I was gladdened to see our very own ( as in fellow blogger) Joan take out the general non-fiction category. Well done.
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