Stephen Daisley
has won New Zealand’s richest writing prize, the inaugural $50,000 Acorn
Foundation Literary Award, for his novel Coming Rain, announced this
evening at the 2016 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards..
Daisley (60), who
was born and raised in the Raetihi Hotel, which his parents owned, is a former
soldier in the NZ Army. He was 56 years old when his first book, Traitor,
was published to wide literary acclaim in Australia, winning a Prime Minister’s
Award for Literature. Daisley now lives in Western Australia, where he is a
farmer and shearer.
The 2016 Ockham
New Zealand Book Awards Fiction category convenor of judges, Jill Rawnsley,
says Stephen Daisley’s novel shone from
the outset.
“Coming Rain is a universal story
of love and aspiration, betrayal and disappointment. The prose is masterful,
simple and moving. The characters are utterly believable and complex in their ordinariness.
It was a book that all three judges came across joyfully and read with the ease
of those who know they’re in the hands of a confident writer.”
Daisley is one of
eight Ockham New Zealand Book Awards winners announced at the Auckland Town
Hall ceremony.
Dunedin writer
and critic David Eggleton has won the
Poetry category for his collection The Conch Trumpet (Otago
University Press), a win described by the category’s convenor of judges,
Elizabeth Caffin, as a tribute to Eggelton’s extraordinary fluency and energy.
“Always vigorous
and fluent, David Eggleton evokes in song and incantation the ancient, the
deep, the unspoken forces of myth and memory in Aotearoa. In huge sentences and
tumbling metaphors he catches up his audience and makes his world public. He
has an acute sense of the physical landscape as alive and present — but also of
its history, in word and action,” says Ms Caffin.
Aroha Harris (Auckland), Atholl
Anderson (Marlborough) and the late Judith Binney took the
Illustrated Non-fiction category award for their epic work Tangata Whenua: An
Illustrated History (Bridget Williams Books).
“Far from succumbing to triumphalist
history, Tangata Whenua meets
Māori history on its own terms and rejects some of the comfortable assumptions
of a flawless pre-colonial society. The book’s lasting legacy will be how it
expands the scope of Māori history, weaving together knowledge from
archaeology, anthropology, linguistics, law, political science and, of course,
oral history ... Tangata Whenua is scholarship at
its finest,” says the category’s convenor of judges Jane Connor.
Well-known
novelist, Witi Ihimaera, won the General
Non-Fiction category for his memoir, Māori Boy: A Memoir of Childhood (Penguin
Random House).
This year’s
category judges’ convenor, Simon Wilson says: “With Māori
Boy, Witi Ihimaera has woven his
whakapapa into a great cloak whose feathers wink and flash as you hold it to
the light: there are personal and family secrets, revealed with courage and
grace; yarns spun with a gleeful skill; polemics that slip through the weave
and demand to be considered, too. A delight to read alone, it’s also for
reading aloud, and it’s not hard to imagine, with Māori and Pākehā audiences
alike, just how delightful — and also explosive — that experience might be.”
The awards return
this year following a 12-month hiatus with new sponsorship and, in a
partnership with the Auckland Writers Festival, a winners’ ceremony that’s part
of the Festival programme and open to the public for the first time.
New Zealand Book
Awards Trust chair, Nicola Legat, says the winners’ works stood out in a
stellar list of finalists.
“This year’s
winning books are testament to the sheer hard work and passion of their authors
and a determination for excellence on the part of their publishers. These
awards are vital to the health and progression of our literature. The Trust
salutes this year’s winners, and sincerely thanks our sponsors and our
outstanding judges,” says Ms Legat.
Auckland Writers
Festival director, Anne O’Brien, says she cannot think of a better way to
launch the six-day festival.
“Tonight we
honour New Zealand’s best writers of the last eighteen months and their
extraordinary works. As the largest presenter of New Zealand literature in the
world, we are proud to present the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards and to
showcase this country’s literary heroes alongside their international peers,”
says Ms O’Brien.
The Poetry,
Illustrated Non-Fiction and General Non-Fiction category winners each took home
a $10,000 prize.
This year’s four open category awards winners will appear at a
free event at the Auckland Writers Festival: The Winners’ Podium,
Friday 13 May 5.30pm in the Upper NZI Room, Aotea Centre.
Four Best First Book Awards were
also given at the event. One is a new prize – The Judith Binney Best First
Book Award for Illustrated Non-Fiction — awarded to Richard Nunns for Te Ara Puoro: A Journey into the World of Māori Music by (Potton and Burton). Due to ill
health, Richard Nunns was unable to attend; his daughters, Molly and Lucy
Nunns, received the award on his behalf.
The other three Best First Book
Awards were The Jessie Mackay
Award for Poetry, presented to Chris Tse for How
to Be Dead in the Year of Snakes (Auckland University Press); The
Hubert Church Award for Fiction, presented to David Coventry for his
debut novel The Invisible Mile (Victoria
University Press), and The E H McCormick Award for General Non-Fiction,
presented to Melissa Matutina Williams for Panguru
and the City: Kāinga Tahi, Kāinga Rua (Bridget Williams Books).
Each Best First
Book Award winner receives $2500.
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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