The finalists – selected
from 160 entries - include a biography of Captain William Bligh (the target
of naval history’s most famous mutiny), explorations of New Zealand native
trees, pottery and cloaks, and a detailed re-examination of one of New
Zealand’s most shocking murders – the Parker and Hulme case.
That crime previously
inspired one of New Zealand’s best regarded films – “Heavenly Creatures”
– a movie which features in another of this year’s New Zealand Post Book Awards
finalists, a history of New Zealand film.
The judges unanimously found five finalists in
the both general and illustrated non-fiction categories.
“The non-fiction categories feature writers who
are working at the peak of their craft, finding new, original ways in which to
portray New Zealand in print,” said the convenor of the New Zealand Post Book
Awards judging panel, Chris Bourke.
However, due to the strength of this year’s
entries, the judges found it very difficult to limit themselves to just the
three finalists required in the fiction and poetry categories.
“Having all the categories restored to five
finalists would more accurately represent the quality and breadth of New
Zealand’s writing,” said Mr Bourke.
“The same diversity is
present in the fiction and poetry - and should be reflected in the shortlists.”
The Chair of the Book Awards Governance
Group, Sam Elworthy said he appreciated the candour of the judging panel.
“We are committed to ensuring writers
are best served with these awards and the reduction in fiction and poetry
finalists was made after extensive consultation with the literary community.
None-the-less, getting the right format for the country’s premier book awards
is all-important. It is a challenge the Governance Group accept,” says Mr
Elworthy.
He further commented that the Awards
were under review and that exciting changes could be anticipated next year.
The 2012 judging panel
comprises multi-award winning poet, writer, critic and journalist David
Eggleton, writer, publisher, book designer and typesetter Mary Egan,
poet, reviewer, writer and anthologist Paula Green, writer and Maori and
Pacific literature specialist Reina Whaitiri (Kai Tahu) together with Mr
Bourke, a journalist, producer and writer who won last year’s New Zealand Post
Book of the Year prize.
The full list of 2012 New Zealand Post Book Awards finalists by category are:
Fiction:
The full list of 2012 New Zealand Post Book Awards finalists by category are:
Fiction:
From Under the Overcoat by Sue Orr (Vintage, Random House NZ)
The Trouble
With Fire by Fiona Kidman (Vintage,
Random House NZ)
Poetry:
The leaf-ride by Dinah Hawken (Victoria University Press)
Shift by Rhian Gallagher (Auckland University Press)
Thicket by Anna Jackson (Auckland University Press)
General Non-fiction category:
Bligh: William Bligh in the South
Seas by Anne Salmond (Viking, Penguin Group, NZ)
The Broken
Book by Fiona Farrell
(Auckland University Press)
The Hungry
Heart: Journeys with William Colenso
by Peter Wells (Vintage, Random House NZ)
So Brilliantly
Clever: Parker, Hulme and the Murder that Shocked the World by Peter Graham (Awa Press)
Tupaia: The
Remarkable Story of Captain Cook’s Polynesian Navigator by Joan Druett (Random House NZ)
Illustrated Non-fiction:
A Micronaut in
the Wide World: The Imaginative Life and Times of Graham Percy by Gregory O’Brien (Auckland University Press)
New Zealand
Film - An Illustrated History by Diane
Pivac with Frank Stark and Lawrence McDonald (Te Papa Press)
New Zealand’s
Native Trees by John Dawson
& Rob Lucas (Craig Potton Publishing)
Playing with
Fire: Auckland Studio Potters Society Turns 50 by Peter Lange and Stuart Newby (Auckland
Studio Potters Society– in conjunction with the National Institute of Creative
Arts and Industries Centre for New Zealand Art Research and Discovery (CNZARD))
Whatu
Kākahu/Māori Cloaks by Awhina
Tamarapa (Te Papa Press)
People’s Choice Award
Voting opens today for the nation’s favourite book. Nominations can be made from this year’s finalist books on-line at www.nzpostbookawards.co.nz. The 2012 finalist book with the most votes will be honoured with the much-coveted People’s Choice Award.
In addition to individual category winners, and a People’s Choice Award, there will be a Māori Language Award winner and the overall New Zealand Post Book of the Year winner announced at a gala dinner in Auckland on 1 August 2012.
The overall New Zealand Post Book of the
Year Award winner will receive $15,000. Winners of the four Category Awards
will each receive $10,000. The Māori Language Award winner will receive $10,000
and the People’s Choice Award winner $5,000.
New Zealand Post’s sponsorship of the
national book awards reflects their long-standing support for literacy and
education. They maintain that focus throughout the year with
initiatives such as ReadWriteGrow.co.nz, creative writing contests for school students, and the
New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards which they have sponsored for the past
16 years. That commitment to promoting literacy, excellence in writing
and the joy of reading sees New Zealand Post play a key role in supporting
other champions of literature, such as Booksellers NZ, to promote and
reward local literary talent.
The
New Zealand Post Book Awards 2012 are also funded by Creative New Zealand. The
Awards are managed by Book Awards Governance Group, administered by Booksellers
NZ and supported by the New Zealand Society of Authors and Book Tokens (NZ)
Ltd.
1 comment:
Graham - I think it's an exciting list of finalists especially Fiction and Poetry - some of my favourites of the year are up there - and I've commented about this on my blog this morning http://mary-mccallum.blogspot.co.nz/2012/06/stunning-all-women-poetry-and-fiction.html.
I agree with the judges though that longer shortlists would reflect what's out there more fairly. I'd especially like to see a list of runners-up for the first books of fiction and poetry. That sort of acknowledgement goes a long way...
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