INTERNATIONAL
WRITERS’ WORKSHOP NZ INC.
The
Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems
2017
Winner Announced
International
Writers’ Workshop (IWW) is delighted to announce that Janet Newman is the 2017 winner of The Kathleen Grattan Prize
for a Sequence of Poems for her sequence, Tender. The $1000
prize was judged by respected Auckland poet Robert Sullivan.
Tender is
a seven poem sequence about Janet’s father, Doug Newman (1919-2008). The poems
show him as a farmer, a former WWII soldier, and in old age, revealing both his
tough exterior and a covert tenderness. By tracing his life from her childhood
to his death at 89 years, the sequence explores the ways in which war invades
the lives of veterans and their children.
Ms Newman, a member of IWW since 2012
and a runner-up in The Kathleen Grattan
Prize for a Sequence of Poems in 2014, was born in Levin and raised on a
dairy farm at Koputaroa in Horowhenua. She completed a Certificate in Editorial
and Publishing at Wellington Polytechnic and worked as a journalist in Lower
Hutt, Christchurch and Perth in Western Australia before returning to Koputaroa
where she now lives and runs the family farm. She has a Masters of Creative
Writing from Massey University and is presently a PhD student at Massey. Her
critical and creative thesis looks at New Zealand’s long history of
environmentally oriented poetry, and includes a collection of original
ecopoems.
Runner-up is Anne Hollier Ruddy of Orewa who began writing poetry in 2006 and
has been a member of IWW since 2011. Her poems have appeared in various
Australian and New Zealand anthologies, as well
as Shotglass Journal, Cordite Poetry Review and Blackmail Press. Her sequence
of poems, Ambushed by Gauguin, begins and ends with a reflection of the Mother and Child theme in art
with other poems in the sequence exploring it personally in biographical terms.
Mr Sullivan
said writing poetry is a journey of discovery and is timeless, whatever the
style. He said when writing poetry to think, “Is there an accent on what really
matters and not just the right word in the right place?” Of the winning and
runner-up sequences he said the poets have submitted their inner hearts. The
sequences were new and original, exuded honesty and ‘show, not tell’ while
disclosing some aspects of the narrator’s character as well.
About the Prize
The Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems has been made possible by a bequest from the Jocelyn Grattan Charitable Trust. It was a specific request of the late Jocelyn Grattan that her mother be recognised through an annual competition in recognition of her love for poetry and that the competition be for a sequence or cycle of poems with no limit on the length of the poems. It is one of two poetry competitions funded by the Trust, the other being the prestigious Kathleen Grattan Award run by the publishers of Landfall magazine.
Previous Winners
This is the 9th year the prize has been contested. Previous winners are:
2016: Michael
Giacon for Argento in no man land
2015:
Maris O’Rourke for Motherings
2014: Julie Ryan
for On Visiting Old Ladies.
2013: Belinda
Diepenheim for Bittercress and Flax.
2012: James
Norcliffe for What do you call your male parent?
2011:
Jillian Sullivan for how to live it
2010:
Janet Charman for Mother won't come to us, and Rosetta Allan
for Capricious Memory.
2009: Alice
Hooton for America.
About IWW
International
Writers' Workshop NZ Inc
was founded in 1976 by poet Barbara B Whyte and meets on the first and thirds
Tuesdays of the month from February to November in the Lindisfarne Room at St
Aidans Church, 97 Onewa Road, Northcote.
IWW's
main aim is to inspire writers by means of workshops and competitions across
fiction, nonfiction and poetry.
For further
information about the Prize, contact Sue Courtney, President, International
Writers' Workshop NZ Inc, email iww-writers@outlook.com, phone (09) 426 6687.
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