Two
of New Zealand’s leading writers, Witi Ihimaera and Owen Marshall, have been
jointly named as Creative New Zealand-Randell Cottage Writers in Residence for
2015. This is an unusual move for the residency, which selection panel chair
Vincent O’Sullivan describes as an “elegant response to an extraordinary number
of impressive applications.”
The
writers will live and work in Thorndon’s Randell Cottage for three months each,
in the second half of 2015.
Witi Ihimaera is a novelist, short story
writer, anthologist and librettist, was born in Gisborne. He is
of Te Whanau A Kai and Ngati Porou descent with close affiliations to Te
Aitanga A Mahaki, Rongowhakaata, Tühoe, Te Whakatohea, Te Whanau-a-Apanui and
Ngati Kahungunu. His works include Tangi,
The
Matriarch, The Whale Rider, (which
was made in to a film by Niki Caro in 2002), the semi-autobiographical Nights
in the Gardens of Spain , and The
Parihaka Woman. A memoir, Maori Boy
has just been released by Random House. Ihimaera became
a Distinguished
Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit in 2004, for services to
literature.
Ihimaera will use his time at the Randell Cottage to work on
a second volume of his three volume memoir Native
Son, covering the period 1961 to 1990, a trajectory that sets his life
against national and international history, delineating the professional
dilemmas as well as the personal. The
residency will enable him to consult his own archives at the J.B. Beaglehole
Room and also the Foreign Affairs archives at the National Library.
“I’ve got a deadline to meet with Native Son,” he says. “I want to finish the book for publication by
the end of 2016 at the latest, so the three months working out of the Randell
Cottage will keep me on target to deliver. As well, writing a book is like
running a marathon, so there’s a physical advantage in the residency as it’s
equidistant to my two archives. I’ll be walking between both and that will keep
me fit to cope with the mental and emotional rigour of the work.”
Timaru-based writer Owen Marshall has
published or edited almost thirty books, including novels, short stories and
poetry including Living as a Moon,Watch of Gryphons, Carnival Sky, The Larnachs and Drybread. His 1999 novel Harlequin Rex won the 2000
Deutz Medal for Fiction at the Montana Book Awards. He has held fellowships at
the universities of Canterbury and Otago and in Menton, France. Marshall is an adjunct professor at the
University of Canterbury, which awarded him the honorary degree of Doctor of
Letters in 2002. In 2000 he became an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit
for services to literature and in 2012, a Companion of the New Zealand Order of
Merit. In 2013 Marshall was awarded the Prime Minister's Award for Literary
Achievement in fiction.
Marshall
will be working on a contemporary novel concerning a love affair between a
mature couple, one a widower, the other married, in which he will explore the
power of such emotional attachments and their sometimes irrational and damaging
consequences.
For
Marshall: “It’s a privilege and a pleasure to share the 2015 fellowship with
Witi Ihimaera and I look forward to writing in the stimulating environment of
Wellington and being part of the literary community there.”
O’Sullivan
says both the proposed projects are significant: “The Randall Trust is
delighted to play its part in giving what support it can to these eminent
writers.”
The Randell Cottage
Writers Trust was established in 2002. The restored Thorndon cottage, one of
Wellington’s ten oldest buildings, was gifted to the trust by the Price family
and hosts two writers a year; one from New Zealand and the other from France.
The 2015 French resident, writer and translator David Fauquemberg arrives in
Wellington in January 2015. The current New Zealand resident is Kapiti Coast
writer Tina Makereti who is writing an historical and allegorical novel based
on the experiences of the indigenous people who were exhibited in Victorian
London, and elsewhere in Europe, as cultural artefacts and oddities.
Footnote:
Witi Ihimaera will be reading from Maori Boy at Thorndon’s Millwood Gallery on Tuesday, 2 December, between 6:00 and 7:30pm. Tina Makereti, the current resident, will also be reading – from her 2014 novel Where the Rēkohu Bone Sings.
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