Michael Harlow has won the Kathleen
Grattan Poetry Award 2015 with his collection of poems Nothing For It But To Sing.
‘Michael Harlow’s poems,’ says
Emma Neale, judge of this year’s Grattan Award, ‘are small detonations that
release deeply complex stories of psychological separations and attractions, of
memory and desire.’
‘This is a poet with such a command of music,
the dart and turn of movement in language, that he can get away with words that
make us squirm in apprentice workshops or bad pop songs – heart, soul – and
make them seem newly shone and psychically right.’
On hearing the news Michael
Harlow said, ‘I’m absolutely delighted particularly because it involves
publication with Otago University Press. It will be wonderful to be on the OUP
list.’
Michael was at a World Poetry
Festival in Romania when he received the news. Commenting on the $10,000 award
money he said, ‘it will buy time – the thing that all writers need. I’m
planning to use the time to work on a book of prose poems.’
The award attracted 109 entries. Six
poets were highly commended: Hannah Mettner, Elizabeth Morton, David Howard,
Nick Ascroft, Alice Miller and Victoria Broome.
The Kathleen Grattan Award is one
of the richest poetry prizes in New Zealand. Otago University Press accepts the
winning manuscript for publication and the winner also receives a year’s
subscription to Landfall.
Auckland poet Kathleen Grattan, a
journalist and former editor of the New
Zealand Woman's Weekly, died in 1990. Her daughter Jocelyn Grattan, who
also worked for Woman's Weekly,
shared her mother’s love of literature. Jocelyn generously left Landfall a bequest with which to
establish an award in memory of her mother.
Previous winners are Joanna
Preston (The Summer King, 2008);
Leigh Davis (Stunning Debut of the
Repairing of a Life, 2009); Jennifer Compton (The City, 2010); Emma Neale (The
Truth Garden, 2011) and Siobhan Harvey (Cloudboy,
2013).
The biennial award will next be
granted in 2017 (see Otago University Press website for further details: www.otago.ac.nz/press).
About Michael Harlow
Michael
Harlow has published ten books of poetry: Giotto's
Elephant (AUP, 1991) and The Tram
Conductor’s Blue Cap (AUP, 2009) were both finalists in the national book awards.
Harlow has held numerous fellowships and residencies including the Katherine
Mansfield Fellowship and the Burns Fellowship. In 2014 he was awarded the
prestigious Lauris Edmond Memorial Award for Distinguished Contribution to New
Zealand Poetry. This year (2015) he received the Beatson Fellowship for
writers. Michael Harlow lives and works as a writer, editor and Jungian
therapist in Alexandra, Central Otago.
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