David McGill’s comic novel Stamp in the Creek was
launched at Paekakariki Railway Museum Tearooms yesterday by musician Francis
Mills (drinking beer) and his band singing Michael O’Leary’s poem Matata, a tribute to the
village which is the setting for this yarn about the mayhem caused by the theft
of a valuable stamp.
Among those celebrating the occasionwere cartoonists Tom
Scott and Dr Bob Brockie, both cartoonists cover illustrators of McGill’s
collections of Kiwi slang which feature prominently in the novel.
Classic Kiwi
fare included scones with the author’s plum jam, asparagus and sausage rolls,
ginger crunch and chocolate squares all made by Robyn White and lamingtons
provided by her sister Rowena Hales to theme this nostalgic recreation of life
in 1949, when Kiwis did it for themselves.
Hit songs from that year were
played, including Ghost
Riders in the Sky and Mule
Train. This evening the Paekakariki FM station plays Matata sung by Francis
Mills and the author reads an excerpt from the novel in which the postmaster is
trying to cope with his superiors learning via radio and newspapers that he has
provoked another scandal a week after the April Fool’s Day broadcast on 1ZB
alarming listeners that a mile-wide swarm of wasps was descending on Auckland.
Much hilarity and full bellies were had by all in this 51st and (probably)
final book launch by the author.
Michael O’Leary poem:
Matatä
Open up! Open up!
The magic rock of refuge
The charm, the charm
The incantation
Opens up, opens up
The flood of memory
And the flood of water
Down to the sea
Down to the sea
See the rail lines
Washed away, washed away
Like those games we played
In Matatä, in Matatä
And we have gone
But the lines live on
In Matatä, in Matatä
http://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/capital-life/9936843/Writer-closes-chapter-on-life
16 April Footnote:
A message from David:
16 April Footnote:
A message from David:
"The video of the launch is up on my website www.davidmcgill.co.nz and you have to
scroll through me rabbiting on to get to Francis Mills singing Michael O’Leary’s
magnificent poem ‘Matata’, with Gary delivering a haunting flute accompaniment,
with the Mills grandchild doing a star turn ".
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