JAAM 32: Shorelines
was launched simultaneously at the first LitCrawl festival in Wellington and at
The Inch Bar in Dunedin on 15 November. JAAM
is a popular national literary journal, published annually with the help of
funding from Creative NZ/Toi Aotearoa.
For the 2014 issue of JAAM we
shifted south, welcoming Dunedin writer Sue
Wootton (pictured) as our guest editor. Sue is probably best known as a
poet – she has published three collections of poetry, most recently By
Birdlight (Steele Roberts, 2011), and has won awards for her poems. But
she’s also an experienced prose writer. Her ebook of three short stories, The
Happiest Music on Earth, was published in 2012 and
her children’s book, Cloudcatcher, came out in 2010. Sue has twice been a runner up in the BNZ Katherine
Mansfield short story awards, has been a finalist in the Sunday Star Times
and Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize short story competitions, and has
won the Aoraki Literary Festival short story prize.
The theme for JAAM 32 was ‘shorelines’, and Sue welcomed
submissions that considered the theme from many angles. Sue says:
“I chose the
theme of ‘Shorelines’ partly because I see our islands’ physical shorelines as
the great connector for us as a people. I hoped the idea of shorelines would
resonate for others, and prove a creative catalyst. It sure did – there were a
huge number of submissions, and I’m sad to say I couldn’t select every good
piece that I read. I decided to arrange this issue around the idea of korerorero,
as expressed in Teoti Jardine’s opening poem, a kind of “never-ending ebb and
flow” conversation, taking place from one end of the country to the other.”
There was a good representation of South Island writers in this issue,
including Vincent O’Sullivan, Diane Brown, Rachel Bush, David Eggleton, Kerrin
P. Sharpe, Joanna Preston, Carolyn McCurdie, Frankie McMillan, Emma Neale,
Rhian Gallagher and Karen Zelas. Also among the writers whose work features in JAAM 32 are Tracey Slaughter, Morgan
Bach and Tim Jones.
JAAM publishes poetry, fiction,
creative non-fiction, essays, photography and other artwork. It supports new and up and coming writers and
gives them a chance to appear beside established local and international
authors. Guest editor, Sue Wootton says:
“Opening JAAM is always
like lifting the lid on a jack-in-the-box: something energetic jumps out. The
buzz is due to the eclectic (electric) mix of voices within the covers, which
in turn is a result of JAAM’s
commitment to artistic exploration. JAAM
has always been not only a forum for New Zealand’s well-known established
writers but also a place for new writers to chance their pens.”
For more information about JAAM
you can visit: www.jaam.net.nz or contact the editors on jaammagazine@yahoo.co.nz.
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