2019 Ockham Finalists Explore Truth and Issues of Our Times
Four of our best-known novelists – whose novels, appropriately for our times, explore what it means to tell the truth – are in the running for the country’s richest fiction writing prize with today’s Ockham New Zealand Book Awards finalist announcement.
The Cage by Lloyd Jones, This Mortal Boy by Fiona Kidman, All This By Chance by Vincent O’Sullivan, and The New Ships by Kate Duignan are shortlisted for the $53,000 Acorn Foundation Fiction Prize.
“They stood out for their ability to explore personal memory and collective mediation of the truth in new and provocative ways that have a lasting impact on the reader,” says the Fiction category convenor of judges Sally Blundell.
Award-winning New York-based novelist Joseph O'Neill will assist the three New Zealand judges to select this year’s Acorn Foundation Fiction Prize winner.
Today’s announcement
includes two major new Awards’ sponsors. Mitochondrial
science company MitoQ will sponsor the four Best First Book
awards, and arts enthusiasts and philanthropists Mary and
Peter Biggs will support the Poetry category.
MitoQ’s
chief marketing officer John Marshall says that as one of
New Zealand’s newest success stories, it is their pleasure
to help emerging writers further enrich the country’s
literature.
Peter Biggs says that with poetry undergoing a wonderful resurgence in our country over the last few years, it struck him as strange that the Award for Poetry was unsupported.
“We are thrilled to be involved and hope that the Award continues to recognise poetry’s – and the poet’s – vital role to, as Salman Rushdie says, shape the world and stop it from going to sleep.”
The finalists in the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry are Are Friends Electric? by Helen Heath; There's No Place Like the Internet in Springtime by Erik Kennedy; The Facts by Therese Lloyd and Poūkahangatus by Tayi Tibble.
“The poetry collections on this year’s shortlist are marked by a striking diversity of approaches to the lyric poem, but all show an ambitious and engaging interest in experimenting with narrative, form, structure and voice without sacrificing emotional resonance,” says this year’s Poetry category convenor of judges Bryan Walpert.
The Royal Society Te Apārangi Award for General Non-Fiction finalists are New York Times best-selling author and academic Joanne Drayton for Hudson & Halls: The Food of Love; lauded and much-loved writer Maurice Gee for Memory Pieces; debut author Chessie Henry for We Can Make A Life, and renowned editor and writer Anna Rogers for With Them Through Hell: New Zealand Medical Services in the First World War.
“We were excited by the fresh and diverse perspectives, new voices, and generous writing reflected in the shortlist, as well as by the appeal and attractiveness of the books themselves,” says General Non-Fiction category convenor of judges Angela Wanhalla.
In the Illustrated Non-Fiction category, the four finalists are: Fight for the Forests: The Pivotal Campaigns that Saved New Zealand's Native Forests by conservationist and journalist Paul Bensemann; Wanted: The Search for the Modernist Murals of E. Mervyn Taylor edited by investigative artist and researcher Bronwyn Holloway-Smith; Tatau: A History of Sāmoan Tattooing by senior curator Sean Mallon with anthropologist Sébastien Galliot, and Birdstories: A History of the Birds of New Zealand by writer, publisher and environmentalist Geoff Norman.
Illustrated Non-Fiction category convenor Douglas Lloyd-Jenkins says the judges were thrilled with the quality and ambition of the short-listed books, all of which clearly stood out from the rest.
New Zealand Book Awards trustee Jenna Todd says the Ockham’s shortlist is clear evidence of the vitality of New Zealand literature.
“Not only does the shortlist feature some of our best known writers - those with long and illustrious careers - but it also includes newcomers writing out of deep passion and engagement. These 16 books deepen the public discourse on a range of issues and the particular genius of each of their writers lifts them to an emotional plane at which they reward and endure for their readers,” says Ms Todd.
The 2019 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards finalists are:
The Acorn
Foundation Fiction Prize:
The New
Ships by Kate Duignan
(Victoria University Press)
The
Cage by Lloyd Jones (Penguin
Random House)
This Mortal Boy by
Fiona Kidman (Penguin Random
House)
All This by Chance by
Vincent O’Sullivan (Victoria University
Press)
The Mary and Peter Biggs Award for
Poetry:
Are Friends Electric?
by Helen Heath (Victoria
University Press)
There's No Place Like the
Internet in Springtime by Erik
Kennedy (Victoria University
Press)
The Facts by
Therese Lloyd (Victoria University
Press)
Poūkahangatus by
Tayi Tibble (Victoria University Press)
The Royal Society Te Apārangi Award for General
Non-Fiction:
Hudson & Halls: The Food
of Love by Joanne Drayton
(Otago University Press)
Memory
Pieces by Maurice Gee
(Victoria University Press)
We Can Make a
Life by Chessie Henry
(Victoria University Press)
With Them Through
Hell: New Zealand Medical Services in the First World
War by Anna Rogers (Massey
University Press)
Illustrated Non-Fiction
Award:
Fight for the Forests: The
Pivotal Campaigns that Saved New Zealand's Native
Forests by Paul Bensemann
(Potton & Burton)
Wanted: The Search for the
Modernist Murals of E. Mervyn Taylor edited by
Bronwyn Holloway-Smith (Massey University
Press)
Tatau: A History of Sāmoan
Tattooing by Sean Mallon with
Sébastien Galliot (Te Papa
Press)
Birdstories: A History of the Birds of
New Zealand by Geoff Norman (Potton &
Burton)
The General Non-Fiction, Poetry and Illustrated Non-Fiction category winners will each receive a $10,000 prize.
The winners (including the four MitoQ Best First Book Awards and a Māori Language Award, presented at the judges’ discretion) will be announced at an awards ceremony on 14 May, at an event in the 2019 Auckland Writers Festival.
To find out more about the shortlisted titles go to http://www.nzbookawards.nz/new-zealand-book-awards/2019-awards/shortlist/