Friday, November 30, 2007

Camp, Kate



[Creative NZ (2011)]

Kate Camp (b. 1972)


Contents:

New New Zealand Poets in Performance (2008):

Postcard
Documentaries
Backroads
Water of the Sweet Life
Guests

[Recorded at the Going West Books & Writers Festival (17/9/06)]


Bio /Bibliography:

Kate Camp was born in Wellington in 1972. She has a BA Hons in English from Victoria University, and works as a reviewer on print and radio. Her first collection of poetry, Unfamiliar Legends of the Stars (1998) won the NZSA Jessie Mackay Award for Best First Book of Poetry at the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards. She was Writer in Residence at Waikato University in 2002.

POETRY:

Unfamiliar Legends of the Stars. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 1998.
Realia. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2001.
Beauty Sleep. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2005.

CRITICISM:


On Kissing. Montana Estate Essay Series. Wellington: Four Winds Press, 2002.

Colquhoun, Glenn



Contents:

New New Zealand Poets in Performance (2008):

from Whakapapa
She asked me if she took one pill for her heart …
Lost property
On the death of my grandmother

[Recorded at the Going West Books & Writers Festival (13-14/9/02 & 21/9/03)]


Bio /Bibliography:

Glenn Colquhoun is a doctor as well as a writer. His time in the Te Tii community in the Bay of Islands provided the inspiration for his first book of poetry, The Art of Standing Upright (1999), which won the Jessie Mackay Award for best first book of poems at the 2000 Montana Book Awards. His third book, Playing God (2002), won the Poetry category of the Montana Book Awards in 2003, and then went on to win the coveted Readers’ Choice award, the first poetry title to do so. His latest book, How We Fell (2006) combines poetry with graphic novel illustrations by Nikki Slade Robinson. He lives on the Kapiti coast near Wellington.

POETRY:

The Art of Walking Upright. Wellington: Steele Roberts, 1999.
An Explanation of Poetry to My Father. Wellington: Steele Roberts, 2000.
Playing God. Wellington: Steele Roberts, 2002.
How We Fell (A Love Story). Illustrated by Nikki Slade Robinson. Wellington: Steele Roberts, 2006.

CRITICISM:

Jumping Ship. Montana Estate Essay Series. Wellington: Four Winds Press, 2004.

FOR CHILDREN:

Uncle Glenn and Me. Illustrated by Kevin Wildman. Auckland: Reed, 1999.
Uncle Glenn and Me Too. Illustrated by Kevin Wildman. Auckland: Reed, 2004.
Mr Short, Mr Thin, Mr Bald and Mr Dog. Wellington: Steele Roberts, 2005.

Campbell, Meg


[Photograph: Patricia Reesby]

Meg Campbell (1937-2007)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD06

1. Fish
2. After Loving
3. Aftermath
4. Brown Peahen
5. Bee of Anger
6. Journeys
7. Disturbances


Bio / Bibliography:

I was born in 1937 in Palmerston North, the second of five children. At 8 yrs I was sent to boarding school in Takapuna, Auckland. After a year I returned home to Palmerston North and attended a small, private school called Carncot until I was sent to Wellington to boarding school. Continued an interest in English and Drama while at Samuel Marsden from '51 to '53.

I continued my love of the theatre, joining "Manawatu Repertory" back in Palmerston North. In Jan. 1956 I attended a Summer Drama School at Massey College and then headed for Wellington to become a student of Rhona Davis.and sit A.T.C.L. hoping to head for London, and Drama School, there.

In 1958 I married the poet Alistair Campbell and with him had three children, Aurelian, Josephine and Maringikura.

Bibliography:

The Way Back, Te Kotare Press, 1981.

A Durable Fire, Te Kotare Press, 1982

Orpheus and Other Poems, Te Kotare Press, 1990

How things are, (with three other poets), Whitireia Publishing and Daphne Brassell Associates Press,1996

The Better Part, Hazard Press, 2000

Campbell, Alistair Te Ariki



Contents

New Zealand Poets Read Their Work (1974):



Waiata Archive (1974):



Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

Bio / Bibliography:


Contents:

Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance (2006):

The Gunfighter
Home from Hospital
Lest We Forget
Maori Battalion Veteran


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD06

1. Lest We Forget
2. Stretcher Bearer
3. Gallipoli Peninsula
4. Breath of Life
5. Words and Roses
6. Warning to Children
7. Sgt. Jack Tainui – Maori Friend
8. Maori Battalion Veteran


New Zealand Poets Read Their Work (1974):

LP 1, side 1

Against Te Rauparaha

LP 3, side 2

At a Fishing Settlement
The Gunfighter
The Cromwell Gorge


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 5

Hut near Desolated Pines
At a Fishing Settlement
The Return
The Cromwell Gorge
Against Te Rauparaha
Why Don’t You Talk to Me
The Gunfighter
Home from Hospital
Small Town Blues
Love Song for Meg


12 Taonga from the AoNZPSA (nzepc, 2004):

Gallipoli Peninsula


Bio /Bibliography:

Poet and novelist; born Rarotonga, 25 June 1925; son of John Archibald Campbell and Teu (née Bosini) of Tongareva; married (1) Fleur Adcock; 2 sons (diss. 1957) (2) Meg Andersen, 1958, 1 son, 2 daughters. Lives at Pukerua Bay in a house looking out towards Kapiti Island, with his wife, Meg, who is also a poet, and five springer spaniel dogs (including the ghost of KooShe).

Education: Otago Boys' High School; Victoria University College, B.A., 1953; Wellington Teachers' College, 1952-53; Teacher Newtown School, 1954; Editor, School Journal, 1955-1972; Senior Editor, N.Z. Council for Educational Research, 1972-87.

Bibliodata:

Guest writer, Adelaide Festival of the Arts, 1978; N.Z. Book Award for Poetry, 1982; Arts Council Scholarship in Letters, 1990; Writer's Fellow, Victoria University of Wellington, 1992; Pacific Islands Artist Award, l998; Hon. D.Litt.; Victoria University, 1999.

Published Verse includes Mine Eyes Dazzle, 1950; Sanctuary of Spirits, 1963; Kapiti : Selected Poems, 1972; The Dark Lord of Savaiki, 1980; Soul Traps, 1985; Stone Rain: The Polynesian Strain, 1992; Gallipoli and Other Poems, 1999; Maori Battalion, 1999; Poets in Our Youth, 1992. Published Fiction includes The Frigate Bird, 1989; Sidewinder, 1991; Fantasy with Witches, 1998. Memoir; Island to Island, 1984. Published Drama includes Sanctuary of Spirits (radio) 1963; The Proprietor (radio) 1964; When the Bough Breaks (stage), 1970. T.V. documentaries : Island of Spirits, 1973; Like You I'm Trapped, 1975; Mine Eyes Dazzle, 2003.

Chan, David




David Chan (b. 1960)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD06

1. Ivory ball
2. 100 year old egg
3. Grandfather
4. Memory-fish
5. Poem for five years
6. A poem you will never read
7. In this city


Bio / Bibliography:

David Chan was born in Auckland in 1960. His work has been published in various Australian journals and the 1995 collection, From Yellow Earth to Eucalypt. His poem ‘100 Year Old Egg’ placed second in the 1993 Australian National Radio Poetry Prize.

Featured in:

Picador New Writing, 2 (1994)
From Yellow Earth to Eucalypt: Stories and Poems from China and Australia, Melbourne: Longman, 1995

Chad, Tony


[Photograph: HeadworX]

Tony Chad


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD06

1. A Possum's Tail
2. My First Home
3. The last waltz
4. Letter from Ireland
5. Hirondelles
6. Ricardo
7. In case you were wondering ….
8. Snake
9. Six
10. Mastering the Arts
11. How it is
12. Welcome to LA
13. S E P A R A T I O N
14. A Coming Of Age
15. Playing the game
16. Clearing out the Closet
17. After


Bio / Bibliography:

Tony Chad is a full time musician and poet living in the country just outside Upper Hutt. He is the managing editor of SPIN magazine and editor of monthly poetry magazine Valley Micropress whose first anthology All Together Now!was released last year. He is well known for his poetry and original songs, and for performances with his Celtic band Finn McCool who have appeared at Summer City, Orientation and Toast Martinborough as well as many Irish Pubs & Clubs from Wellington to Taranaki and Hawkes Bay. Tony performs solo or with Scottish fiddler Alistair Cuthill, has performed music and poetry at folk clubs all around the North Island plus solo excursions to the South Island and has presented workshops to adults and to school-children in both islands. He has organised and performed in two celebrations of Montana Poetry Day in Upper Hutt, along with performers such as Sam Hunt, James Brown, and Lewis Scott.

Tony has appeared many times in the Wellington Fringe Festival - twice in Stand Up Poets, three times in Welcome to the Flat Earthers and a Band of Poets, once in Upper Hutt's Kool Store and once in Upper Hutt Comes to Town. His work has appeared in several editions of JAAM and Poetry NZ as well as many anthologies and magazines in New Zealand and overseas. Much of his work targets people in business, aiming to question how we sell our time and why, and what becomes of our creativity and our sensitivity in the process. After 20 years corporate computing he is enthusiastically embracing a life after corporate death.

Sun over Kapiti (1995) album of original music: CD.

Tigers, Wild Pigs & Possums ISBN 0-473-05031-5. (Aug 1997)

Caselberg, John


John Caselberg (1927-2004)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD06

1. Invocation
2. from The Sound Of The Morning [9,12]
3. The Wake [1-9]


Bio / Bibliography:

John Caselberg was born at Wakefield, a small farming locality near Nelson, in 1927. His father, who had been a rural G.P., left the family for Australia the same year, and Caselberg moved with his mother and sisters to Nelson. He attended Bishop’s School and Nelson College, and had early contact with Nelson’s painting community. (These links were to prove enduring. Caselberg’s wife, the painter Anna Caselberg, was the daughter of Nelson artist Tosswill Wollaston, whom Caselberg had met while still a teenager.) After leaving school, Caselberg enrolled at the University of Otago to study medicine. During his time in Dunedin, he befriended the poet James K. Baxter, and made his first attempts at writing fiction and poetry. In 1948, during a brief stay in Christchurch, Baxter introduced him to the painter Colin McCahon. Caselberg and McCahon became frequent correspondents, and Caselberg was to take photographs of McCahon’s paintings with him to show art dealers in Europe during his O.E. in 19501.

Returning to New Zealand in 1951, Caselberg worked briefly on the state hydroelectric scheme in central Otago before moving to Christchurch in early 1952 to train as a teacher. Now living in the same city, he and McCahon quickly extended their friendship into a working relationship. They co-founded the arts broadsheet Issue, the first number of which (June 1952) contained a sequence of seven poems by Caselberg, accompanied by a McCahon linocut. A second issue appeared in September, but a third - which was to contain a jointly-authored treatise ‘On the Nature of Art’ - was never published.

During the late 1940s and early 1950s, Caselberg had been writing poetry and submitting it for publication in local journals. In 1954, his first volume of poetry, The Sound of the Morning, appeared under the Pegasus imprint; it contained the seven poems published earlier in Issue 1. The following year, Caselberg shifted to Auckland, where he continued writing - a short story, ‘Eli Eli Lama Sabachthani’, won Landfall’s Prose Award for 1957. That same year, McCahon produced a series of lithographs based on the text of the poem ‘Van Gogh’ (from Sound of the Morning), and Caselberg had published the first of eight critical articles on McCahon’s work.

In 1965, the Nag’s Head Press published Caselberg’s Six Songs and The Wake. ‘The Wake’ was a poetry sequence written on the death of Caselberg’s dog, Thor, the text of which McCahon incorporated into his 16-panel painting, ‘The Wake’ (1958). In 1961, after their marriage, the Caselbergs moved to Dunedin, where Caselberg took a Burns Fellowhip at the University of Otago. During his time there, he wrote the first in a series of verse dramas on nineteenth-century Maori and Pakeha relations, Duaterra, King. Four further plays in the sequence were written over the next two decades. In 1973, Caselberg’s travel writing and art criticism (including extracts from the unpublished ‘On the Nature of Art’) was collected in Chart to My Country. 1989’s Lines contains material from Caselberg’s previously-written verse dramas; Matins & Other Verse followed in 1992. In 2002, Caselberg’s biography of R.A.K. Mason, Poet Triumphant, (completed some years earlier) appeared with Steele Roberts. Peter Simpson’s Answering Hark (Nelson: Craig Potton, 2001) documents the Caselberg/McCahon relationship, and reproduces much unpublished material.

John Caselberg died in Dunedin on April 16, 2004.

Bibliography:

Sound of the Morning (Christchurch: Pegasus, 1954)
Six Songs and the Wake (Christchurch: Nag’s Head Press, 1965)
Lines: Scenes and Passages from Verse Dramas (Christchurch: Nag’s Head, 1989)
Matins: & Other Verse (Christchurch: Nag’s Head, 1992)

Chan, Jill


[Photograph: Mateo Chan, Jr.]

Jill Chan (b. 1973)



Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD07

1. The First Patient
2. The Smell of Oranges
3. Earth
4. Tug
5. Imagination
6. The Acts
7. First Day
8. Reckoning
9. Work of Art
10. Turning
11. A Death
12. Holding Up
13. The Bone
14. Corners
15. Afterimage
16. Watermark
17. The Gift
18. The Conversation
19. The Conversation 2
20. Quantum
21. Trust
22. Occupation
23. Density
24. What We Covered
25. Weight
26. Dexterity
27. Faith
28. Momentary States of Darkness


Bio / Bibliography:

Jill Chan was born and grew up in Manila, Philippines. She migrated to New Zealand in 1994.

Her poems have been published in JAAM, Poetry New Zealand, Brief, MiPOesias, foam:e, Tears in the Fence, Blue Fifth Review, Asia and Pacific Writers Network, Otoliths, and some other magazines.

She was among the new and emerging writers mentioned in PEN American Center's year-end members survey for 2005.

She is the editor of Poetry Sz: demystifying mental illness, and Numinous: Spiritual Poetry, and co-editor of Best New Poems Online.

Publications:
  • The Smell of Oranges (Earl of Seacliff Art Workshop, 2003)
  • Becoming Someone Who Isn't (Earl of Seacliff Art Workshop, 2007)
  • These Hands Are Not Ours (Earl of Seacliff Art Workshop, 2009)

Chanwai-Earle, Lynda


[Photograph: Jan Kemp (2002)]

Lynda Chanwai-Earle (b. 1965)


Contents:

New New Zealand Poets in Performance (2008):

Details from a personal journal
Gasp


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD07

1. To Hastings with love
2. Details from a personal journal
3. Gasp


12 Taonga from the AoNZPSA (nzepc, 2004):

Gasp


Bio / Bibliography:

Born in London 1965 she spent a large part of her childhood in Papua New Guinea. She holds a Bachelors degree in Fine Arts and a Post Graduate Diploma in Drama from Auckland University. In 1994 Lynda published her first book of poetry, Honeypants with Auckland University Press. In 1995 Honeypants was selected for the Penn Book Awards and the New Zealand Book Awards. Lynda worked as an actor and script co-ordinator with Jim Moriarty’s theatre group Te Rakau Hua O Te Wao Tapu from 1995 to 1999, touring and creating theatre throughout schools and prisons around Aotearoa.

Ka-Shue (Letters Home) is New Zealand’s first contemporary theatre piece about the Chinese community, a solo show written and performed by Lynda Chanwai-Earle, based on her own family background as a Eurasian and a Chinese New Zealander. Ka-Shue was published in 1998.

"Ka Shue gives voice to the experience of a young Chinese New Zealand woman ... the staging is simple and effective ... the delight of a girl discovering her Chinese heritage is beautifully communicated ... a family saga of blockbuster proportions.”

The Dominion, 1997

Critically acclaimed, Lynda’s most recent stage production Fire Mountain (Foh-Sarn) is a play about young and new immigrant Asians;

“… (Fire Mountain) explodes into violent action and a fiery, tragic climax… a stunningly beautiful production …”
Susan Budd,
The NZ Herald 31.10.00
“… Ground-breaking theatre …”
The Listener, 29.10.00

Lynda is currently the Writer in Residence with Capital E, The National Children’s Theatre, developing her next play Monkey. She lives and works in Auckland as a Reporter/Director for the television programme Asia Down Under (TVNZ).

Cochrane, Geoff




Geoff Cochrane (b. 1951)


Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

Spindrift Sunday
1988
Zigzags
Atlantis


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD07

1. The fate of an …
2. Degrees
3. Spindrift Sunday
4. Missing the Big Match
5. Disposable Camera
6. Effects
7. 1988
8. Zigzags
9. Query
10. Atlantis


Bio /Bibliography:

I was born in 1951 in Island Bay, Wellington, and educated at S Patrick’s College, Cambridge Tce. My first little books were private-press productions; my current publishers are Thumbprint Press and Victoria University Press. I’ve contributed verse and stories to JAAM, Takahe, PRINTOUT, The Listener, Landfall and SPORT. My poems appear in many recent anthologies.

Novels:

Tin Nimbus (VUP, 1995)
Blood (VUP, 1997)

Collected Stories:

Brindle Embers (Thumbprint Press, 2002)

Books of Verse:

Images of Midnight City (Hauraki Press, 1976)
The Sea the Landsman Knows (Voice Press, 1980)
Taming the Smoke (Grape Press, 1983)
Kandinsky’s Mirror (Rat Island Press, 1989)
Aztec Noon (VUP, 1992)
Into India (VUP, 1999)
Acetylene (VUP, 2001)
Nine Poems (Fernbank Studio, 2002)

Charman, Janet




Janet Charman (b. 1954)


Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

'they say that in paradise'
ready steady
from wake up to yourself
but she wanted one
cuckoo in the nest
injection


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD07

1. the alarm
2. i dig out the couch
3. a barbecue remembered in the bath
4. they say that in paradise
5. ready steady
6. night wear
7. waiting for the kettle
8. going to work
9. saying goodbye to the garden
10. foreword
11. starring in the middle of the night
12. laundry
13. but she wanted one
14. kicked up
15. cuckoo in the nest
16. dairy man
17. injection
18. the V. Dub


Bio /Bibliography:

Janet Charman has published five collections of poetry. Her most recent is: Snowing Down South, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2002. She is an Auckland teacher.

Monographs:

Snowing Down South, Poems, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2002.
Rapunzel Rapunzel, Poems, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1999.
End of the Dry, Poems, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1995.
Red Letter, Poems, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1992.
Two Deaths in One Night, Poems, Auckland: New Women’s Press, 1987.

Cooke, Kay McKenzie



Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD08

1. Stuart Street
2. a weasel crosses
3. there’s no lie
4. kaka beak red
5. Te Wae Wae Bay
6. tongue-tied
7. feeding the dogs
8. the rifle
9. the triangle shop idea might even work
10. teased hair and perfect eyesight
11. heat and cold
12. ‘I love this farm so much I could pat it’


Bio / Bibliography:

Kay McKenzie Cooke was born in Tuatapere, Southland 1953 and spent her formative years on farms in Southland. She is of Scottish, Irish, English and Maori descent. She has lived in Dunedin for twenty years. She is married to Robert and they have three sons. Kay also has a daughter and grand-daughter. Her first book of poems called feeding the dogs was published by University of Otago Press in 2002. Kay is a trained Primary and Early Childhood Teacher and works part-time in the Education Sector.

Bibliography:

All of the poems I read are in my first collection of poetry called feeding the dogs which was published by University of Otago Press in 2002.

I have had haiku published in the Second NZ Haiku Anthology ed. by Cyril Childs.

I have also had poems published in various lit. magazines including Glottis, Sport, JAAM, Poetry NZ. I have had work published in ezines S.O.R. and Trout.

Cummings, James Moeroa




James Moeroa Cummings


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD08

1. No. 4
2. Letter Home
3. Surfin TV Blues
4. Skid and the Rainbow
5. The Kind of Kindness that Kittens can do Without
6. Miles Dead Blues
7. Saxmansmacksoundaround
8. As Time Goes By
9. Mahalia Sings to my Troubled heart
10. No. 3
11. The Moment
12. Jason’s Song
13. The Unemployed Angels


Bio / Bibliography:

James Moeroa Cummings lives in Christchurch.

Curnow, Allen


[Photograph: Marti Friedlander]

Allen Curnow (1911-2001)


Contents:

Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance (2006):

House and Land
The Unhistoric Story
The Skeleton of the Great Moa in the Canterbury Museum, Christchurch
A Dead Lamb
Any Time Now


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD08

1. Gare SNCF Garavan
2. The Kindest Thing
3. Narita
4. Do Not Touch the Exhibits
5. Things to Do with Moonlight [1-3]
6. Looking West, Late Afternoon, Low Water
7. Early Days Yet [1-3]
8. The Scrap-book [1-3]
9. The Bells of Saint Babel’s [1-5]
10. Ten Steps to the Sea [1-10]
11. Fantasia and Fugue for Pan-pipe [1-4]
12. House and Land
13. The Unhistoric Story
14. The Skeleton of the Great Moa in the Canterbury Museum, Christchurch
15. A Leaf
16. The Loop in Lone Kauri Road


New Zealand Poets Read Their Work (1974):

LP 1, side 2

Lone Kauri Road
Two Pedestrians with One Thought
Magnificat


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 1

Lone Kauri Road
Friendship Heights
An Upper Room
A Dead Lamb
A Framed Photograph
Two Pedestrians with One Thought
Magnificat
A Four Letter Word
A Hot Time
Anytime Now


Bio /Bibliography:

Allen Curnow was born in Timaru, New Zealand, in 1911. He was educated at the Universities of Canterbury and Auckland. After a period of study for the Anglican ministry, he worked for the Press newspaper and the News Chronicle (London) before teaching at the University of Auckland (1951-76) as lecturer and associate professor of English. His first book of poems appeared in 1933; it was followed by many others. He edited anthologies, including The Penguin Book of New Zealand Verse (1961), continued to write poems, plays and criticism and travelled widely. He read and recorded his poems for major universities and the Library of Congress, for the BBC and Australian radio, as well as for the Poetry Society (London), the Cambridge Poetry Festival, the Toronto International Festival of Authors, the Voice Box and the International Poetry Festival at Southbank Centre. He held the Litt.D. degrees from the University of Auckland and (honoris causa) Auckland and Canterbury. He received the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry seven times. He was made a CBE in 1986, was awarded the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry in 1989, the ONZ in 1990 and the Cholmondeley Award for Poetry in 1992. He died in 2001.

Select Biblio:

Valley of Decision, Auckland: Auckland University College Students’ Assoc., 1933
Enemies: Poems, 1934-36, Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1937
Not in Narrow Seas: Poems with Prose, Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1939
Island and Time, Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1941
Recent Poems, (with A.R.D. Fairbum, Denis Glover, and R.A.K.Mason), Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1941
Sailing or Drowning, Wellington: Progressive Publishing Society, 1944
Poems, Jack without Magic, Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1946
At Dead Low Water and Sonnets, Christchurch: Caxton Press, 1949
Poems, 1949-57, Wellington: Mermaid Press, 1957
A Small Room with Large Windows: Selected Poems, London: Oxford University Press, 1962
Trees, Effigies, Moving Objects: A Sequence of Poems, Wellington: Catspaw Press, 1972
An Abominable Temper and Other Poems, Wellington: Catspaw Press, 1973
Collected Poems, 1933-73, Wellington: Reed, 1974
An Incorrigible Music: A Sequence of Poems, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1979
Selected Poems, Auckland: Penguin, 1982
You Will Know When You Get There: Poems 1979-81, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1982
The Loop in Lone Kauri Road: Poems 1983-85, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1986
Continuum: New and Later Poems, 1972-88, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1988
Selected Poems, 1940-89, London: Penguin Books, 1990
Penguin Modern Poets (with Donald Davie and Samuel Menashe), London: Penguin Books, 1996
Early Days Yet: New and Collected Poems 1941-1997, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1997
The Bells of Saint Babel’s, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2001

Curnow, Wystan


[Photograph: Jan Kemp (2002)]

Wystan Curnow (b. 1939)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD09

1. from From the Art Hotel


Bio / Bibliography:

I have published 3 books of poetry:

Back in the USA, Wellington, Black Light press, 1989;
Cancer Daybook, Auckland, Van Guard Xpress, 1989,
Castor Bay, proses and pictures, Auckland, Holloway Press, 1996.

My work has been included in 11 anthologies and appeared in 24 literary magazines in New Zealand, the UK and USA. I was a co-founder and editor of SPLASH magazine. 1984-1987.

I have myself or with others written or edited 25 books and exhibition catalogues, curated 24 exhibitions mainly in New Zealand, but also in the US, Britain and Holland. I have presented 39 conference papers in 8 countries. I co-organized the conference, Is Art a European Idea? for the 1994 Wellington International Festival of the Arts. I have co-organised a panel on Cartography and contemporary art for the 2003 International Conference on the History of Cartography at Harvard. My work has been translated into Japanese, French, Dutch, Croatian, German, and Russian.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Davidson, Lynn




Lynn Davidson


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD09

1. Alan Paints the House
2. Cape Gooseberries
3. Greenstick Fracture
4. How to Eat Cape Gooseberries
5. Hunger
6. Loving Words
7. Poem for Tamara
8. Salt Works
9. Tuning Fork


Bio / Bibliography:

Lynn Davidson has written a book of poems, Mary Shelley’s Window, published by Pemmican Press in 1999 and a novel, Ghost Net, published by Otago University Press in 2003. Lynn has had many of her short stories and poems published in literary journals and magazines, most often in Landfall and Sport. Her short stories have also been produced for national radio. In 2002, Lynn was part of the Porirua Poets exhibition at Pataka, Porirua Museum of Arts and Cultures - an exhibition of poems with photographs.

Lynn lives with her family on the coast north of Wellington.

Dane, Peter


[Photograph: Jan Kemp (2002)]

Peter Dane (1921-2016)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD09

1. I Love Two Women
2. Make Me Gay
3. The Life We Share
4. Post Mortem
5. The Albatross Is Dead
6. The Play Has Ended
7. To Be Carefree
8. The Curtain Rises
9. Learning To Trust
10. So Near so Far [1-3]
11. Is It Time?
12. Can These Bones Live?
13. Reel
14. The Long and the Short of it
15. Cruel Memory [1-2]
16. Illimitable
17. Disclosure


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 9

Three Poems from the German of Christian Morgenstern
1. An Aesthetic Creature
2. The Fence
3. The Sigh
Just to Show What He Could Do
Sunday Afternoon
Parhelion – on Van Gogh’s Night Piece with Stars
Dutch Interior on Peter Jansen’s Woman reading
Sunset at Muriwai
Muriwai
The Parting
After the Parting
Unfinished
The Spider & the Fly
Heard melodies are sweet …


Bio / Bibliography:

Born in Berlin in 1921, of mixed German and Jewish parentage. Fled to England in 1939. Interned as an enemy alien in 1940 and transported to Australia. Returned to England in 1942. Married Gabriele Herrmann in 1945, when he was a stoker and she was a qualified nurse. Studied Mathematics and Philosophy, then Greek, Theology and Literature. Graduated from London University in 1952. Taught at Makere in Uganda for eight years, and from 1962 to 1986 taught English Literature at Auckland University. His passion for Art in its various forms, in the early ‘70s joined forces with a passionate concern for the environment, which sustains all life and art. Peter Dane died on the 29th July, 2016.

Publications:

Twenty-four Sonnets, Auckland: The Lowry Press, University of Auckland, 1982.
The Albatross is Dead: Sixty Sonnets, Auckland: Hudson Cresset, , 2000.
‘Dutch Interior’, Poetry NZ 5 (ed. Riemke Ensing) 1992.
‘Hate’, Listener, 12 October 2002
‘Air and Angels’, Southern Review, Vol. 17, No. 3, November, 1979 (prize-winning essay)
‘Rosemary Menzies’, Creative Forum, Vol. 11, Nos. 1-2, Jan-June, 1998 (eds. R.K. Singh and U.S. Bahri).

Davis, Leigh




Leigh Davis (1955-2009)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD09

1. Section 1: Labour Friday, Coastal Classic (from The Office of the Dead)
2. Section VIII: The Other Day (from The Office of the Dead)


Bio / Bibliography:

Leigh Davis lives in Auckland. He is an investment banker. He writes sometimes, about art, and he writes poetry, as well. His published works include Willy's Gazette (1983), Earth-Bound Ghosts (1998), General Motors (2000), and The Book of Hours (2002). The last three were multi-media works.

Website: www.jackbooks.com

de Montalk, Stephanie



Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

Tree Marriage
Northern Spring


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD09

1. Cha-Cha-Cha
2. Tree Marriage
3. Dog on a Mountain
4. In this Country
5. Ode to Small Things She Loved Which Moved Away
6. Common Oak, Europe
7. Northern Spring
8. Concrete
9. Epilation of Eyelash


Bio / Bibliography:

I was born in 1945. I live in Wellington and have four adult children.

I am a registered nurse. I have also worked as a documentary film maker, video censor and warden of two university halls of residence. Until recently I was a member of the New Zealand Film and Literature Board of Review. In 2002 I convened the second semester Poetry Workshop at the International Institute of Modern Letters, Victoria University.

I was educated at the Wellington Hospital School of Nursing, and Victoria University where I was joint winner of the Prize for Original Composition in 1997 and from which I graduated in 2000 with an MA (with Distinction) in Creative Writing.

I started writing in 1997. That year I was joint winner of the Novice Writers’ Award in the BNZ Katherine Mansfield Memorial Awards.

Since then I have had short fiction published in Landfall and read on National Radio; and poetry published in numerous magazines and anthologies in New Zealand and abroad, including: Sport, Landfall, NZ Listener, Poetry NZ (featured poet issue XX), JAAM, Turbine, Southerly (Australia), London Magazine, Mutes & Earthquakes (ed. Bill Manhire) (under Miller), Spectacular Babies (ed Bill Manhire and Karen Anderson), Doors and Jewels in the Water (ed. Teny Locke), Big Weather (selected by Greg O’Brien and Louise White), Essentials of English Language 2 (Terry Locke and Mark Wilkins), Eleven Books from the Rita Angus Cottage (printed and published by Brendan O’Brien); and read on National Radio’s Nine to Noon.

In 2000 my first collection of poetry, Animals Indoors, was published by Victoria University Press. The following year it won the Jessie McKay Award for Best First Book of Poetry at the NZ Montana Book Awards.

In 2001 my memoir/biography Unquiet World: the life of Count Geoffrey Potocki de Montalk was published by Victoria University Press. It will be published in Poland, in Polish by Jagiellonian University Press, Cracow, in 2003. My Stout Research Seminar, ‘Superbug Rumour and Truth’ on the writing of this biography will be published in the Journal of NZ Studies, 2003.

In 2002 my second collection of poetry, The Scientific Evidence of Dr Wang was published by Victoria University Press.

Dickson, John


[photograph: Jan Kemp (2002)]

John Dickson (b. 1944)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD10

1. To start with
2. plainsong
3. spinster
4. roadside
5. her words, her vision mainly
6. a glimmering of grand ultimate fist
7. memory
8. the fortune teller
9. sleeper


Bio / Bibliography:

Born 1944 in Milton, South Otago. Lives in Dunedin. Burns Fellow 1988. University of Waikato Writer-in-Residence 2000.

Books:

What happened on the way to Oamaru, Christchurch: Untold, c.l986.
Sleeper, Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1998.

Audiocassette:

‘butan’. Christchurch: New Edge, c.1991.

Dowrick, Lee


[Photograph: NZ Book Council]

Lee Dowrick (b. 1931)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD10

1. Writing to My Father
2. His Majesty’s Theatre, Auckland 1902 – 1988
His Majesty’s Theatre (performance version)
3. A Manhunt … By Design … Fifties Style
4. The Bay
5. No More Settlers Allowed
6. You Went to China
7. News Item
8. Off-target
9. A Different Garden
10. Footprints
11. Swindled
12. Little Cleopatra, 1941
13. Dangerous, 1936


Bio / Bibliography:

Lee Dowrick lives and writes in Devonport on Auckland’s North Shore.

She grew up with her four brothers and a sister in Waipukurau, Hawke’s Bay. Stock Sale days on Tuesdays, empty paddocks with creeks, trees and bridges along the Tukituki river set their scene.

In the fifties she changed trains at Palmerston North and headed for the Big Smoke, Auckland, a culture shock that was alive with jobs and adventure. Freelance participation in feature and story writing for newspapers and magazines(plus putting personal pomes in people’s pay packets to relieve office routines), led to an established interest as a writer. This she picked up again when she ‘retired’ in 1991. She now joins in and organizes poetry workshops and readings for festivals, shows and private functions. She also works along with a special language teacher in workshops for children to write, perform and publish their own poetry in small booklets.

Bibliodata.

Some of Lee‘s poetry comes from her country childhood during wartime and from life in the city in the fifties. Current social comment and politics lurk within her current work. Some is written specifically for performance.

Her poems have been placed in several New Zealand and Australian competitions and published in Printout, Spin, Poetry NZ, Takahe, NZ Listener and Glottis, and contemporary collections Doors, Jewels in the Water and Something Between Breaths. She has recorded selected poems for the NZ National Archives.

Her first collection, based on working in the public service during Rogernomics,
What’s left in politics? with drawings by Kate Wells, was self published in 1993.
In 1998 - That was Then – was published by Christian Gray NZ
and in 2001 - I run in my stilettos was published by Bookcaster Press. There were interviews and readings from these on National Radio.

Lee has read some of her short stories on Access Radio, a NZ science fiction story "Three is a Cloud" is anthologised in Star Songs, some have appeared in magazines. A short short story in The Third Century, Tandem Press 1999.

She has also won some competitions for children’s poems and her work has been published in Allsorts magazine, School Journals, Another 100 NZ poems for Children, NZ Memories and broadcast on National Radio children’s programmes.

Poetry collections:

That was Then (Christian Gray NZ) 1998
I run in my Stilettos (Bookcaster Press) 2001.

Dolan, John


[Photograph: nzepc]

John Dolan (b. 1955)


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD10

1. Response to a letter to the Otago Daily Times
2. Moscow 1993
3. Shelley Nameroff
4. "God forgives me."
5. Let's Clarify About the Trees
6. The Death of Justice Gibson (A Ballad)
7. The Very Moment When The Camera Left Me
8. Bats and Spiders
9. Waterloo


Bio / Bibliography:

John Dolan has a Ph.D in rhetoric from the University of California at Berkeley and has held various jobs, including attack-dog handler at a truckyard in Oakland. He has published poems in many US literary journals, and his first collection, Slave, won the Berkeley Poetry Prize in 1988. He lived in Dunedin for ten years where he lectured in the English Department at Otago University. Aside from two books of poetry, he has published many poems, reviews and articles in New Zealand. After working in Moscow for at time as co-editor and journalist of the infamous newspaper the eXile, he has now settled in Vancouver.

Books of Poetry:

Slave. Berkeley: Occidental Press, 1988
Stuck Up. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1995
People with Real Lives Don’t Need Landscapes. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2003

Books:

Poetic Occasion from Milton to Wordsworth. London/New York: MacMillan/St. Martin’s Press, 1999.
Like a Man: Masculinities in New Zealand (co-edited with Hugh Campbell and Robin Law) Auckland: Dunmore Press, 1999.
Writing Well, Speaking Clearly. Dunedin: University of Otago Press, 1996 (Revised Second Edition 1999)

Doyle, Mike


Mike (Charles) Doyle (b. 1928)


Contents

New Zealand Poets Read Their Work(1974):

LP 1, side 1

At Karekare Beach
One’s Once One
The Journey of Meng Chiao

LP 3, side 1

Growing a Beard
The Tree


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 18

The Journey of Meng Chiao
At Karekare Beach
Hello, is that you, this is me
Four Notes from a Dream Book
Victor Coleman for Gift of Light …
Shaving
Growing a Beard
One’s Once One
The Tree
Stone by Stone
Discovery

Duncan, Grant




Grant Duncan (b. 1960)


Contents:

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD10

1. L'Orto Botanico
2. Cocktail
3. Airmail from Tuscany
4. The Flying Vixen [recording truncated]
[4a. The Flying Vixen - YouTube version: complete]
5. The melancholy seaman
6. Homage to a dead poet
7. An undecidedly spring day
8. Desire
9. Lunch with my father
10. Western
11. Nocturne
12. Crepusculum
13. Fingered
14. Precious


Bio / Bibliography:

Grant Duncan was born in Hastings in 1960, and attended Raureka Primary School and Heretaunga Intermediate. After one year at Hastings Boys’ High School (from which he was expelled on his last day for refusing to cut his hair), the family moved to Auckland, where his father built a house at Beachlands. Grant completed his high-school education at Pakuranga College where he acquired a love of Shakespeare and Renaissance art. He attended Auckland University, completing a BA in psychology in 1980, an MA in 1984 and a PhD in 1989, and was a regular contributor to poetry readings in Auckland throughout those years. His daughter Pansy was born in 1983. In 1990, he spent a year in Italy, attending the University of Siena. He began a lectureship in social sciences at Massey University’s new Albany campus in 1993. Grant was a member of the group that initiated and published the literary journal Printout from 1991 to 1997. He edited issues 1 and 9. In recent years, he has had little involvement in literary life in this country.

Some memorable publications include:

Poems:

‘A lesson in light’, Sport 5 (1990) p. 120.
‘An expedition to explore the interior’, Kunapipi 12(1) (1991) pp. 70-75 (University of Aarhus).
‘Airmail from Tuscany: To Pansy Duncan’, Sport 6 (1991) p. 139-141.
‘L’Orto Botanico’, ‘Cocktail’, ‘The Flying Vixen’, ‘Renaissance naturalist’, Landfall 179 (1991) pp. 317-320.
‘The melancholy seaman’, ‘Moving star 1’, Snafu 2 (1993) p. 42.
‘Airmail from Tuscany: A picture postcard’, Poetry NZ 8 (1994) p. 36.
‘Homage to a dead poet’, Ariel : a review of international English literature 26(2) (1995) p. 40 (University of Calgary).
‘Some angels’, Southerly 56(4) (1996) p. 57 (University of Sydney).
‘Palfrey’s rubbish’, Spin 39 (2001), pp. 22-4.
‘Epidaurus’, Complete with Instructions (2001), p. 15 (ed. D. Howard; Firebrand).
‘Western’, brief #24 (2002), pp. 15-16.

Volumes of verse:

Dreams of falling (Punga Press, 1981)
Away with words (ESAW, 1986).

Essays:

‘The Narration of Pain and Suffering: Culture, meaning, healing’, Complete with Instructions (2001), pp. 15-21 (ed. D. Howard; Firebrand).
‘Nationhood and writing: Why poetry doesn’t matter anymore’, Poetry NZ 24 (2002), pp. 80-86.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Eager, Michael




Michael Eager


Contents

Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD10

1. Amsterdam today
2. Van Gogh's Car
3. I Am ...
4. Sometimes
5. These days / that fever
6. Endings
7. Letter to London
8. The Firewood Tree
9. That was when
10. Housing Corp Road
11. When
12. Arum Lilies
13. The Cast


Bio / Bibliography:

Mike Eager is a poet who values the performance of his work as highly as publishing. He toured schools and universities as part of Poetrycorp in the late '80s. In 1991 he toured Britain and Ireland with his first book, Warning. On his return he did a solo Arts Council sponsored tour of Northland and published his second book of poems, Living First Class in a Third World Country. He often links poems as narrative sequences, including chant and song for variation of rhythm and emotion.

Books Published:

Warning: Poems, Mike Eager/ Alex Staines. Rush Hour Press 1990
Living First Class in a Third World Country, Mike Eager. Rush Hour Press 1993

Edmond, Lauris




Lauris Edmond (1924-2000)


Contents:

Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance (2006):

Before a Funeral
Scar Tissue
yellow-eyed penguin
Autumn in Canada


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD11

[read by Lauris Edmond]:

1. Yellow-eyed Penguin
2. In Position
3. Body Language
4. Autumn in Canada
5. Taking Down Christmas Decorations
6. Hymn to the Body
7. Take One

[read by Frances Edmond]:

8. Late Song
9. The Eighth Decade
10. Afternoon at Akatarawa
11. Being There
12. Generation Gap
13. Driving home, Sunday night
14. Lunch in the city
15. Looking like Veronica
16. Geography
17. This year 1000 Americans will live to be over 100
18. Insomniac
19. Evening in April
20. Cucumber: a short essay


Frances Edmond [photograph: Jan Kemp]


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 4

A Mixed Neighbourhood
Commercial Traveller
Town
Before a Funeral
Leaving
A Visit
Piano Practice
Facing Facts
Scar Tissue
Mister Dog
Making Good
The Party
The Rabbit
Rimu


Bio /Bibliography:

Lauris Edmond (1924-2000) grew up in Greenmeadows and spent the first part of her adult life in rural communities. Her husband was a teacher in country high schools and during the 1950's and 1960's she brought up their six children. In 1975 she began to write seriously and her first book In Middle Air (1975) won the PEN Best First Book Award. Some sixteen volumes of poetry followed, ending with the posthumous collections Late Song and Carnival of New Zealand Creatures (2000). Amongst the awards and fellowships were: the Katherine Mansfield Fellowship (1981), Commonwealth Poetry Prize (1985), OBE for services to poetry and literature (1986), Lillian Ida Smith Award for poetry (1987), Hon D. Litt (Massey University, 1988), and many others. She read her work widely both in New Zealand and overseas. Her poetry won her not only critical acclaim but reached out to many different people throughout the world.

Other writing included a novel, a sequence of plays for radio, a number of short stories as well as essays and reviews and she edited a volume of A.R.D. Fairburn's letters (1981). Her life as a poet, mother, wife, teacher and editor has been recorded in three volumes of autobiography which were collected into one volume as An Autobiography in 1994. Her commitment to the writing community is reflected in her work for New Zealand Books, the review periodical founded by the Peppercorn Press in 1990.

Poetry:

In Middle Air, Pegasus Press, 1975
The Pear Tree, Pegasus Press, 1977
Salt from the North, Oxford University Press, 1980
Wellington Letter: A Sequence of Poems, Mallinson Rendel, 1980
Seven (with lino cuts by Jim Gorman), Wayzgoose Press, 1980
Catching It, Oxford University Press, 1984
Selected Poems, Oxford University Press, 1984
Seasons and Creatures, Oxford University Press and Bloodaxe Books, 1986
Summer near the Arctic Circle, Oxford University Press, 1988
New and Selected Poems, Oxford University Press and Bloodaxe Books, 1991
Five Villanelles, Peppercorn Press, 1992
Scenes from a Small City, Daphne Brasell Associates, 1994
Selected Poems, Bridget Williams Books, 1994
A Matter of Timing, Auckland University Press, 1996 (published by Bloodaxe Books as In Position)
50 Poems: A Celebration, Bridget Williams Books/Peppercorn Press, 1999
Late Song, Auckland University Press, 2000
Carnival of New Zealand Creatures, Pemmican Press, 2000

Autobiography:

Hot October, Allen and Unwin, 1988; Bridget Williams Books, 1989
Bonfires in the Rain, Bridget Williams Books, 1991
The Quick World, Bridget Williams Books, 1992
An Autobiography, Bridget Williams Books, 1994, 2001


Frances Edmond, writer and actress, is Lauris Edmond's daughter and Literary Executor. She trained at Toi Whakaari/New Zealand Drama School and first performed her mother's work at Circa Theatre in 1977. During Lauris' lifetime she and Frances collaborated on many projects including a one woman play that Lauris wrote for her daughter. Frances currently works as a screenwriter.

Edmond, Murray


[Photograph: nzepc]

Murray Edmond (b. 1949)


Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

Voyager


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD11

1. Catch
2. Gone Dogs
3. The Ballad of the Eighth Day of the Week
4. Elegy for Mama
5. Venice Unrevisited
6. The Ballad of the Penguin
7. The Cold War
8. Ballad of Child Rearing
9. Pass the Past
10. Inland
11. Sleeping Rabbit
12. Landrynka
13. Jungle
14. Voyager
15. Starfish Streets


Bio /Bibliography:

Born Hamilton 1949.
Educated at the University of Auckland (1968 – 1971) where edited 2 issues of The Word is Freed and worked as Literary Editor for Craccum, the student newspaper.
In the 1970s and 1980s worked as an actor, writer and director for various companies – the Living Theatre Troupe, Beggar’s Bag Theatre, Theatre Action, The Half Moon Theatre (London), Town and Country Players and the Mercury Theatre.
Had extensive involvement in the 1980s and 1990s in Playmarket’s Playwrights Workshops as an actor, director and dramaturge as well as a member of the organising committees.
Dramaturgy includes David Geary’s Lovelock’s Dream Run, Jacob Rajan and Justin Lewis’s Krishnan’s Dairy, The Candlestickmaker, and The Pickle King, Toa Fraser’s No 2 and Paradise, and Witi Ihimaera’s Woman Far Walking.
Author of 9 books of poetry and editor of 3 anthologies. The most recent of these are, respectively, A Piece of Work (Hawai’i: Tinfish P, 2002) and Big Smoke: New Zealand Poems 1960 – 1975 (Auckland: Auckland UP, 2000) with Alan Brunton and Michele Leggott.
Doctoral thesis was a history of New Zealand experimental theatre from 1962 to 1982 entitled Old Comrades of the Future.
Presently teaches drama, theatre and poetry in the English Department at the University of Auckland.

Biblio:

A Piece of Work. Hawai’i: Tinfish P, 2002. A book-length poem.
Big Smoke: New Zealand Poems 1960 – 1975. Ed. with Alan Brunton and Michele Leggott. With introductory essay, "Poetics of the Impossible." Auckland: Auckland UP, 2000.
Laminations . Poems. Auckland: Auckland UP, 2000.
Names Manes. Poems: Artist's Chapbook with Anna Miles, 1996.
The Switch. A book-length poem. Auckland UP, 1994.
Australia New Zealand Anthology of Poetry. Ed. Chang Hua. NZ section ed. Murray Edmond; Aust. section ed. John Tranter. Peking, 1993.
From The Word Go. Poems. Auckland UP, 1992.
The New Poets: Initiatives in New Zealand Poetry. Anthology. Ed. with Mary Paul. Wellington: Port Nicholson Press, 1987.
Letters and Paragraphs. Poems. Christchurch: Caxton, 1987.
End Wall. Poems. Auckland: Oxford, 1981.
Patchwork. Poem sequence. Day's Bay: Hawk Press, 1978.
Entering the Eye. Poems. Dunedin: Caveman, 1973.

Eggleton, David


[Photograph: F. J. Neuman]

David Eggleton (b. 1952)


Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

Poem for the Unknown Tourist
Teen Angel


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD12

1. A Pacific Islander Reflects in Cuba Street
2. Grass
3. Place
4. Poem for the Unknown Tourist
5. Teen Angel
6. The Bush Paddock
7. Turangawaewae
8. Uruwhenua / Gateway to the Land
9. Deep South


Bio /Bibliography:

New Zealand Performance Poet David Eggleton began reciting his poetry in the New Zealand rock music scene of the early eighties, and he has since toured on the cabaret circuit in Australia, the United States, Europe and Britain, where he won the London Time Out Street Entertainer of the Year Award for Poetry. These days he regularly performs his poetry in schools, universities, pubs, clubs and cafes all over New Zealand.

His first poetry collection, South Pacific Sunrise was co-winner of the PEN Best First Book of Poetry Award in 1987.

A 1996 video: For Arts Sake - Art and Politics - Performance Poet David Eggleton won First Prize for TV Arts Documentary in the Qantas Media Awards 1997.

His recordings include the CDs: Baxter (2000), 1 track; Seeing Voices (1999), 3 tracks; and Poetry Demon (1993), 17 tracks. He is has completed a new CD, Versifier (out on Yellow Eye Records, 2002) ; a 12 minute digital video of the poem "Teleprompter"; and a 5 minute video of the poem "The Cloud Forest".

He writes freelance arts criticism for magazines and newspapers (including Art New Zealand, Architecture New Zealand and Urbis), and has had an essay included in the award-winning book on Ralph Hotere: Black Light, as well having essays included in a number of other publications. He has won the Reviewer of the Year Award four times for his book reviews.

He has collaborated with photographer Craig Potton in the production of two New Zealand scenic books: an anthology of landscape writing - Here on Earth (1999) (finalist in the Montana Book Awards), and a sequence of essays entitled Seasons - the New Zealand Year (2001).

He is currently writing a series of books on New Zealand cultural history. The first one is: Ready to Fly - the Story of New Zealand Rock Music (2003).

Ensing, Riemke


[Photograph: James Ensing-Trussell]

Riemke Ensing (b. 1939)


Contents:

Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance (2006):

Morning Glory
Love Affair
T’ai Chi
Transport


Aotearoa NZ Poetry Sound Archive (2004):

CD12

1. Morning Glory
2. Love Affair
3. Another Exile Paints a Spring Portrait of Katherine Mansfield
4. Blood Falls
5. Day of Remembrance: The Ancestors
6. Finding the Ancestors
7. from: In Camera [11]
8. from: Poems for China [T'ai Chi]
9. Crossings
10. War – Childhood
11. Shoah
12. Transport
13. Parables with a Four-Coloured Bowl...
14. The Painter's Studio at Tarawera
15. Tarawera: Wairua (essence)
16. Birds Passing the Night
17. Te Maunga Tapu
18. War – Biography
19. Life
20. Schierbeek boven Howick



[Photograph: Simone Oettli (c. 1975)]


Waiata Archive (1974):

CD 11

Moon Myth
House & Garden
A Pleasant Enough Fairytale & Why Not?
Two Poems on Samuel Beckett:
Broken Flowers & a Torn Rainbow
Kite Flying with Words
Poem
Some Moon Poems I
Some Moon Poems II
Some Moon Poems III
Some Moon Poems IV


12 Taonga from the AoNZPSA (nzepc, 2004):

War - Childhood


Bio /Bibliography:

Riemke Ensing was born in Groningen, The Netherlands, in 1939. With her parents she immigrated to New Zealand at the age of twelve in 1951. At this stage of her life she spoke no English. She went to school first in Dargaville, then to Ardmore Teachers' Training College, after which she taught for two years, returning to the College to lecture in English literature for a year. She again became a fulltime student and on graduating M.A.(Hons) in 1967, was appointed to a position in Literature in the English Department at the University of Auckland,where she taught till 1999 when she took early retirement. She has since been appointed an Honorary Research Fellow (Faculty of Arts) and in 2002 was a Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellow .

In 1977 Riemke Ensing edited the pioneering anthology of New Zealand Women Poets – Private Gardens. Since then her work has been published extensively in numerous publications and appears in many anthologies (both in New Zealand and overseas), including, among others, The Twentieth Century Anthology of New Zealand Poetry, The Penguin Book of Contemporary New Zealand Poetry, The Oxford Anthology of New Zealand Poetry , 15 Contemporary New Zealand Poets, Big Smoke, Essential New Zealand Poems , The Visionary, Below the Surface – words and images in protest at French testing on Mururoa, Kiwi and Emu (Australia), New Directions, (USA), Zo Rende ik uit het Woord (Netherlands), Whales (Canada), and Earth Against Heaven – a Tiananmen Square Anthology (Australia) . Her poetry has been broadcast on radio and television. Some of her poems have been translated into other languages, including Dutch, German, Japanese and Chinese.

Riemke Ensing's most recent collection of poetry, Talking Pictures – Selected Poems, (HeadworX, 2000) is her tenth volume. She has also written extensively about the visual arts, including a catalogue entitled Stanley Palmer – Poor Knights. She has read her work throughout New Zealand, having been invited to participate in most major literary events for many years and has read as guest in Sydney, Melbourne, Canberra, London, Amsterdam and on such occasions as Singapore Writers' Week (1993), The Commonwealth Writers' Conference in Edinburgh (1986), The PEN Conference in Hamburg (1986) and in Kuala Lumpur and other parts of Malaysia (2000) for the 8th World Poetry Reading Festival.

Riemke Ensing has been a recipient of writing grants from Creative New Zealand and has won a number of recognitions for poetry competitions in New Zealand, America and Australia. Entries on her several contributions appear (among others) in New Zealand's Who's Who, The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature (Robinson & Wattie, 1999) and The Cambridge Guide to Women's Writing in English (ed.Sage, 1999).

Edited:

Private Gardens – an anthology of New Zealand Women Poets, Caveman Press, Dunedin, 1977.
Poetry NZ 5, Brick Row Publishers, Auckland, 1992.
Gloria in Excelsis – a selection of poems by Gloria Rawlinson – in celebration, The Pear Tree Press, Auckland, 1995.

Poetry:

Making Inroads – Invocation for the New Zealand Women's Convention, Hamilton, 1979, Coal Black Press, Auckland, 1980
Letters , The Lowry Press, University of Auckland, 1982
Topographies , (graphics by Nigel Brown) Prometheus Press, Auckland, 1984
Spells from Chagall, The Griffin Press, Panmure, Auckland, 1987
The K.M. File and Other Poems with Katherine Mansfield, Hazard Press, Christchurch, Melbourne, 1993.
Like I Have Seen The Dark Green Ladder Climbing, The Pear Tree Press, Auckland, 1995
Dear Mr. Sargeson..., Cape Catley, Whatamango Bay, Queen Charlotte Sound, 1995
Finding the Ancestors – poems to celebrate the occasion of the first Dutch Language and Culture Conference of its kind in New Zealand, Pear Tree Press, Auckland, May 1999.
Tarawera Te Maunga Tapu , The Pear Tree Press, Auckland, 1999.
Talking Pictures – Selected Poems, HeadworX, Wellington, 2000

Art:

Stanley Palmer: Poor Knights – a catalogue published in association with the exhibition organized by the Fisher Gallery, Pakuranga, Manukau City, 1992.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

French, Anne



Contents:

Contemporary New Zealand Poets in Performance (2007):

The New Museology
Trout
Acute
Uncle Ron’s Last Surprise

[Recorded at the Going West Books & Writers Festival (11/9/05)]


Bio /Bibliography:

Anne French was born in Wellington in 1956. She was educated at Ngaio Primary School, Wellington Girls' College and Victoria University, where she received an MA in 1980. She has trained as a teacher and was at one time a Teaching Assistant in the English Department at Victoria University.

French was the editor (1981), Managing Editor (1982), then Publisher (1989) at Oxford University Press New Zealand, Publisher at Te Papa Press, and the Managing Editor of New Zealand Strategic Management (New Zealand’s only refereed business journal). She is now the Strategic Adviser at the Foundation for Research and Technology.

Her collection Boys’ Night Out (1998) was a finalist in the 1999 Montana New Zealand Book Awards, which she won in 1987 with All Cretans Are Liars (which also received the PEN Award for Best First Book of Poetry in 1988). Her other publications include The Male as Evader (1988), Cabin Fever (1990), Seven Days on Mykonos (1993), and (most recently) Wild (2005).

French was the inaugural writer in residence at Massey University in 1993.

In her spare time, she pursues interests which include music, fishing, gardening, and sailing. She sings in Cantoris, a Wellington choir dedicated to early music, manages the Wellington Junior Symphony Orchestra, and recently completed an opera libretto called ‘The Long Lunch’, which is being set by Wellington composer Michael Vinten.

POETRY:

All Cretans are Liars. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1987. The Male as Evader. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1988. Cabin Fever. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1990. Seven Days on Mykonos. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1993. Boys' Night Out. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 1998. Wild. Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2004.