Tauranga Arts Festival has launched its 2015 Literary Programme which features three international guests, two weekends of conversation, ideas and opinions, and for the first time offers a day pass ticket which is a buy three, get one free deal. For more information see the website. http://www.taurangafestival.co.nz/writers
Appearing on the weekend of October 24 and
25 are:
Christina
Lamb – a British foreign correspondent who has been
covering Afghanistan for more than 25 years. Her latest book, Farewell Kabul (published in April), is a
personal account of the longest war ever fought by the US, and one of the
longest fought by the UK. How
did a group of religious students and farmers defeat the might of NATO, with 48
countries and 140,000 troops on the ground? Christina,
who was awarded an OBE in 2013, is in conversation with Wallace Chapman (Radio
NZ National).
Phil
Jarratt – a renowned surfing writer from Australia
rode his first wave aged 9 and published his first article about surfing in
1968, aged 17. Since then he has edited Tracks
magazine and the Australia edition of Surfer's
Journal, been named among Australia’s 50 most influential surfers, worked
for Quiksilver, and founded the Noosa Surfing Festival, the world’s largest
surf carnival. His books include That
Summer at Boomerang (2014), the story of Hawaiian surfer Duke Kahanamoku
and a teenage Aussie girl on the eve of World War 1, while his
best-selling Mr Sunset (about surf
legend Jeff Hakman) was made into a film. In 1974, Phil spent his last few
hundred dollars on a holiday package to Bali – the start of an adventure that
has lasted a lifetime. In his 2014 book Bali:
Heaven and Hell he offers a history of the island, interwoven with a
personal memoir. Phil will be talking to Tony Wall (surfing) and Stephanie
Johnson (Bali).
Riley
Elliott – an avid spearfisherman, surfer, scuba
diver, Riley is a PhD student in shark biology at the University of Auckland.
His passion for sharks developed while working in South Africa where he began
freediving with sharks (no cage!) and became addicted to the ‘surprising calm’
he felt. With a quarter of the world’s sharks and rays threatened with
extinction, it turns out humans might be the more dangerous animal. Author of Shark Man (2014), Riley last year hosted
a 30-part television series by the same name. He will be in conversation with
Tony Wall.
Stephanie
Johnson – in her latest novel, The Writers’ Festival, Stephanie possibly uses her own experiences,
including as a founding board member of the Auckland Writers Festival, and at last
year’s inaugural Australia and New Zealand Festival of Literature and Arts in
London. What makes for a good festival and why are some festivals thought to
treat their writers shabbily? The
Writers’ Festival continues the story of characters first met in The Writing Class (2013).Stephanie joins
Tauranga Arts Festival associate director Claire Mabey, who last year attended
the same London festival, Hay-on-Wye and Edinburgh to talk to Stephen
Stratford.
Debra
Daley – the award-winning novelist and screenwriter
has set her two most recent novels in the 18th century (Turning the Stones, 2014, and The
Revelations of Carey Ravine, forthcoming) of
England, Ireland and India. The Tauranga resident calls the period “a
brilliant, lively age laced through with wit”. She joins Maori-Chinese
playwright Mei-Lin Te Puea Hansen (The
Mooncake and the Kumara) to talk to Claire Mabey.
Tracey
Barnett – an Auckland journalist campaigning to
change the law against mandatory detention of asylum seekers in New Zealand
called, “We Are Better Than That”. She is a regular commentator in the media on
asylum and refugee issues and will join Christina Lamb, currently covering the
refugee crisis in Europe, to talk to Wallace Chapman.
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