Debut writer nominated for $50,000 prize
A Wellington
writer’s first novel is a finalist in the country’s most prestigious book
awards, rubbing shoulders with literary heavyweights, all contenders to win the
new $50,000 Acorn Foundation Literary Award.
David
Coventry, whose debut book The Invisible
Mile, about a New Zealander who in 1928 rode
with the first English-speaking Tour de France team, is one of four Fiction category
finalists in the 2016 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards, as are the distinguished
novelist Patricia Grace (Chappy), Emeritus
Professor Patrick Evans (The Back of His
Head) and Stephen Daisley (Coming
Rain).
The fiction titles
are four of the 16 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards finalists announced today,
after a year-long hiatus that sees the awards return with new sponsorship, increased
prize money, and a winners’ ceremony open to the public as part of the Auckland
Writers Festival.
The
convenor of judges for the Fiction category, Jill Rawnsley, notes that the four
finalist books are all historical novels. “All are masterful examples of
storytelling, using multiple narrative points of view, conjuring up hugely
memorable – if not always likeable - characters and vivid portrayals of hard
physical and psychologically complex lives.”
The Poetry category’s convenor of judges, Elizabeth Caffin, says choosing a shortlist of four from the
ten longlisted poetry collections seemed at first a breeze. “Extraordinarily,
we all instantly agreed on three books: Roger Horrocks' The Ghost in the Machine, Tim Upperton’s The Night We Ate the Baby and David Eggleton’s The Conch Trumpet.
“Choosing
the fourth finalist was difficult, given that the three remaining long-listed
titles - by Leilani Tamu, Chris Tse and John Dennison - each showed a sophistication,
a technical skill and an originality you would normally find in much more
practised writers. We decided at last on Chris Tse’s debut collection How to be Dead in a Year of Snakes.”
“There are
some threads linking the four General Non-Fiction category finalists,” says
category convenor Simon Wilson. “They’re all by, or about, writers who are
better known for fiction. For most of them the author has invented the manner
of the storytelling, and done so with remarkable skill. They are also, each in
its own way, pathfinders.
“A literary
biography – Maurice Gee: Life and Work
by Rachel Barrowman and a literary memoir – Māori
Boy: A Memoir of Childhood by Witi Ihimaera - give us a pair of much-loved
authors we may feel we have known all our lives, but we discover we have not
known them like this. The cultural failure of the Christchurch rebuild told by
Fiona Farrell in The Villa at the Edge of
the Empire: One Hundred Ways to Read a City and the tragedy of the Holocaust in Lost and Gone Away by Lynn Jenner are visited with deeply
affecting originality,” says Wilson.
The shortlisted titles in the Illustrated
Non-fiction category would be standout books anywhere in the world,” says the category
convenor Jane Connor. “Subjects that each reflect an aspect of our culture are
treated with the depth and care they deserve, by authors, photographs and
publishers alike. The research is impeccable, well-chosen images are
beautifully integrated with strong and authoritative text, and design and
production are of the highest standard.”
The 2016 Ockham New Zealand Book
Awards finalists are:
Fiction
The Back of His Head by Patrick Evans (Victoria
University Press)
Chappy by Patricia Grace (Penguin Random
House)
Coming Rain by Stephen Daisley (Text Publishing)
The Invisible Mile by David Coventry (Victoria
University Press)
Poetry
How to be Dead in a Year of Snakes by Chris Tse (Auckland
University Press)
The Night We Ate the Baby by Tim Upperton (Haunui
Press)
Song of the Ghost in the Machine by Roger Horrocks (Victoria
University Press)
The Conch Trumpet by David
Eggleton (Otago University Press)
General Non-Fiction
Maurice Gee: Life and Work by Rachel Barrowman (Victoria University Press)
The Villa at the Edge of the Empire:
One Hundred Ways to Read a City by Fiona Farrell (Penguin Random House)
Māori Boy: A Memoir of Childhood by Witi Ihimaera (Penguin
Random House)
Lost and Gone Away by Lynn Jenner (Auckland
University Press)
Illustrated Non-Fiction
Te Ara Puoro: A Journey into the
World of Māori Music
by Richard Nunns (Potton and Burton)
New Zealand Photography Collected by Athol McCredie (Te Papa Press)
Tangata Whenua: An Illustrated
History by Atholl
Anderson, Judith Binney, Aroha Harris (Bridget Williams Books)
Real Modern: Everyday
New Zealand in the 1950s and 1960s by Bronwyn Labrum (Te Papa Press)
The winners
(including of the four Best First Book Awards) will be announced at a ceremony
on Tuesday May 10 2016, held as the opening night event of the Auckland Writers
Festival. The awards ceremony is open to the public for the first time. Tickets
to the event can be purchased via Ticketmaster once festival bookings open on
Friday 18 March.
The Ockham New
Zealand Book Awards are supported by the Ockham Foundation, the Acorn
Foundation, Creative New Zealand and Book Tokens Ltd.
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