

In
an unusual example of publisher co-operation, two new books from Albert Wendt
from different houses – From Mānoa to a Ponsonby Garden (poetry Auckland
University Press) and Ancestry (short fiction from Huia) – have just
been launched over two days at The University of Auckland. The festivities
kicked off with a Pasifika poetry mega-reading at LOUNGE 28 and continued the
following night with a formal launch at The University’s Fale Pasifika, which
Wendt was so instrumental in establishing. The formal launch was opened by Papali’itele Pita Taouma and featured readings by Albert
Wendt and former students or protégées Karlo Mila, Serie Barford and Selina
Tusitala Marsh.

Karlo Mila reads.
More
about the new books
From
Mānoa to a Ponsonby Garden is an extraordinary, alert and confident book that
is ultimately a book about ageing and the consideration of death. These poems
move from the warm valley winds of Hawai‘i to the seasons of a garden in
Auckland while the poet considers the nature of life. Joints need replacing,
poets grow older, tsunami destroy and friends slip away, but a spirit of
renewal and humour pervades. Scattered among the garden poems are some of
Wendt’s inky, drawn poems about the Sāmoan tsunami / galu afi.
Ancestry is a new collection of
short stories that explores the nature of family, tradition and culture through
the eyes of those seemingly caught between the realities of modern contemporary
life and the ancestral ties of their heritage. It is a masterful meditation on
the ties that bind people together across time and place. The unpublished
manuscript of Ancestry won the University of the South Pacific Press
Literature Prize in 2011.
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