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Love - that complicated, delicious, pleasurable, necessary feeling ties us to another human, to a mother, father, son, daughter, sibling, lover or friend. Love can also tie us to a place, an experience, an object. We love and we are loved; unexpectedly, gloriously, painfully, dee ...
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Jack Maddever would never talk about his war experiences, but he kept a record in his letters which were never posted. He carried them home on his return in 1945 and they provide a glimpse into his day-to-day existence while in a POW camp in Palembang, Indonesia. In three years J ...
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Frank Sargeson wrote novels, memoirs and plays and was New Zealand's most important writer of short fiction following the death of Katherine Mansfield. He also encouraged numerous other writers, playing an invaluable role in the rise of our national literature, which he champione ...
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The title poem, Journey to the far south , subtitled a traveller's notes, is an impressionistic account of a trip by bus, ferry & train from Tauranga to Dunedin: The train is a harmonica/ a jet of baby sick-/ a landscape/ running backwards. The collection also includes six short ...
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This is the story of the newspaper correspondence column Dot's Little Folk and those who wrote to it. Little Folk was the first correspondence column for children in a New Zealand newspaper. It became the largest feature column of any kind in the history of New Zealand journalism ...
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From the gothic and the carnivalesque to the speculative and beyond, this issue of Landfall pushes the bounds of the real and delves into worlds just-sideways of ours. We have fiction told from the perspective of a giant squid in Nina Seja's piece 'The Collectors', and a short st ...
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As the hosts of the Rugby World Cup, New Zealand is presenting itself to the world. In this new collection of prose poems by award-winning writer Vivienne Plumb she presents New Zealand as it really is by celebrating and skewering New Zealand's national identity in prose poems a ...
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' ... you have the Press, both open and free: use it. Give your thoughts life; let all good measures be brought forward, discussed, and well ventilated.' - William Colenso, writing to the Hawkes Bay Herald in 1859 The provincial newspaper columns were the 'public spheres' of t ...
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In 1942 with a notebook and pencil he had bought from a German guard, Dudley Muff started Alison's Book. Dudley was a prisoner of war in Germany and his niece Alison was four and living in Timaru. With humorous entries, sketches and what he called little men his story grew unti ...
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'It is the desire really to make myself a first person. For many years I was a third person - as children are, 'they', 'she', and as probably oppressed minorities become, 'they'. - Janet Frame, radio interview about writing her autobiography (1983). For the first time ever, this ...
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