Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship
Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship
February 2009
Award-winning writers to take up this year's Buddle
Findlay Sargeson Fellowship Two award-winning writers
have been announced joint winners of this year's Buddle
Findlay Sargeson Fellowship. Steve Braunias and Julian
Novitz will each spend 5 months in the Sargeson Centre in
Auckland, with Steve Braunias taking up tenure in February,
and Julian Novitz in August. Both writers will also
receive a $20,000 grant, allowing them to focus full time on
their writing and each will use the Fellowship to complete
projects they already have underway. Steve Braunias will
commence work on a comic novel and Julian Novitz will work
on the second draft of a novel, as well as completing
several short fiction stories. Buddle Findlay National
Chairman, Peter Chemis, says the two writers follow a proud
tradition, which has seen many of New Zealand's most
distinguished authors occupy the apartment in the centre,
which is adjacent to Auckland University. "The
Fellowship, which we have sponsored for the past 11 years,
is designed to give writers the financial freedom and
personal space they need to contribute to New Zealand's
literary tradition, which is such an important element in
our cultural identity." Steve Braunias is a writer,
columnist and winner of numerous journalism awards,
including the 2006 Qantas Fellowship at the New Zealand
Qantas (Print) Media Awards. His weekly column appears in
the Sunday Star-Times and his book of selected columns,
Fool's Paradise, won Best First Book of Non-fiction at the
2002 Montana New Zealand Book Awards.
Steve has since
written three more books; How to watch a bird (2007),
Roosters I Have Known (2008) and Fish of the Week: Selected
Columns (2008), all published by Awa Press. He is also a
contributor to TV One's Eating Media Lunch and The
Unauthorised History of New Zealand. Julian Novitz is a
short fiction and novel writer. His first book, My Real Life
and other stories (Random House, 2004), won the New Zealand
Society of Authors Hubert Church Best First Book Award for
Fiction at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards in 2005. His
story Three Couples won the 2008 Katherine Mansfield Short
Story Award late last year. Holocaust Tours (Random
House, 2006) was Julian's first novel, and his work has also
appeared in several editions of The best New Zealand
fiction. The Sargeson Fellowship was established in 1987
to commemorate Frank Sargeson and provide assistance for New
Zealand writers. It aims to offer outstanding writers the
opportunity to write full time, free from financial
pressure. Buddle Findlay has sponsored the Fellowship since
1997. Past Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellows (from 1997
onwards) include: Fiona Samuel, Peter Cox, Karyn Hay, Craig
Marriner, Toa Fraser, Debra Daley, Denis Baker, Riemke
Ensing, Vivienne Plumb, Chad Taylor, Shonagh Koea, Diane
Brown, Catherine Chidgey, Sarah Quigley, Tina Shaw, Kapka
Kassabova, Sue Reidy, James Brown, Charlotte Grimshaw, Emily
Perkins, James George, Brigid Lowry and Paula Morris.
ends