Fiction
Barbara Anderson , All
the Nice Girls (Vintage,
NZ). A short, insightful comedy
of manners-cum-romance about
a naval officer's wife who goes
off the rails in 1960s Auckland,
by a writer known for her clarity
and vibrancy.
Anonymous , The
Spin (Hodder Headline).
Allegedly written by a government
insider, hence the anonymity.
Though Kiwis were shocked at
the antics of barely disguised
current politicians, it's all
pretty tame by world standards,
and only mildly revealing about
the behaviour of elected representatives
behind closed doors.
Graeme Aitken , Fifty
Ways of Saying Fabulous (Headline).
An extremely funny book about
burgeoning homosexuality in a
young farm boy, who lives in
a world where he is expected
to clean up muck and play rugby.
Brilliant and touching, but it
loses its way in the final third
and serves up an anticlimactic
ending.
Eric Beardsley , Blackball
08 (Collins, NZ). Entertaining
and fairly accurate historical
novel set in the West Coast coal-mining
town of Blackball during New
Zealand's longest ever labour
dispute.
Graham Billing , Forbrush
and the Penguins (Oxford
University Press, NZ). Described
as the first serious novel to
come out of Antarctica, it is
the compelling description of
one man's lonely vigil over a
colony of penguins and the relationship
he develops with them. Well worth
the effort.
Samuel Butler , Erewhon (Penguin).
Gulliver's Travels-style journey
to a utopian land, initially
set in the Canterbury high country
(where Butler ran a sheep station)
but increasingly devoted to a
satirical critique of mid-Victorian
Britain.
Catherine Chigey , In
a Fishbone Church (Victoria
University Press, NZ). A high-minded,
broad-ranging novel spanning
physical borders and time, learning
about the past and dealing with
it, maybe, by focusing on one
family.
Ian Cross , The
God Boy (Penguin). This
first and only novel of note
from Ian Cross is widely considered
to be New Zealand's equivalent
to Catcher in The Rye. It
concerns a young boy trapped
between two parents who hate
each other and describes the
violent consequences of this
situation.
Barry Crump , A
Good Keen Man; Hang on a Minute
Mate; Bastards I Have Met; Forty
Yarns and a Song (Hodder
Headline). Just a few of the
many New Zealand bushman books
by the Kiwi equivalent of Banjo
Patterson, who writes with great
humour, tenderness and style
about the male-dominated world
of hunting, shooting, fishing,
drinking, and telling tall stories.
Worth reading for a picture of
a New Zealand and a lifestyle
that have now largely disappeared.
Sigrid Crump , Bushwoman (Reed
Books, NZ). Light, fresh and
highly evocative account of a
young German woman's solo travels
on foot in New Zealand's backcountry
during the 1960s and 70s. Infusing
each page with her deep love
of the Kiwi bush and fiercely
independent spirit, Barry Crump's
sister-in-law leaves you full
of admiration.
Alan Duff , Once
Were Warriors (Virago/Random
House). A shocking and violent
book in the social realism, kitchen-sink
drama style, set in 1970s south
Auckland and adapted in the 1990s
for Lee Tamahori's film of the
same name. At its heart are good
intentions concerning the predicament
of urban Maori, but at times
this is a clumsy book with an
oddly upbeat ending. Duff has
recently published a sequel, What
Becomes of the Broken Hearted (Virago/Random
House).
Denis Edwards , Connor
is Free (Penguin). A pretty
run-of-the-mill thriller, but
it will divert you during long
bus, train or plane journeys.
Fiona Farrell , Six
Clever Girls Who Became Famous
Women (Penguin). A second
novel of some quality and style
has the girls of the title reunited
in mid-life to confront what
they have achieved and come to
terms with their present and
the possibilities of the future.
Janet Frame , An
Angel at My Table (Random
House). Though undoubtedly one
of New Zealand's most accomplished
novelists, Frame is perhaps best
known for this three-volume autobiography,
dramatized in Jane Campion's
film which, with wit and a self-effacing
honesty, gives a wonderful insight
into both the author and her
environment. Her superb novels
and short stories use humour
alongside highly disturbing combinations
of events and characters to overthrow
readers' preconceptions. For
starters, try Faces in the
Water, Living in the Maniototo,
Scented Gardens for the Blind, and Owls
Do Cry (all The Women's
Press).
Maurice Gee , Crime
Story; Going West; Prowlers,
The Plumb Trilogy (Penguin).
These from an underrated but
highly talented writer. Despite
the misleadingly light titles,
Gee's focus is social realism,
taking an unflinching, powerful
look at motivation and unravelling
relationships.
Patricia Grace , Potiki (Penguin).
Poignant and poetic tale of a
Maori community redefining itself
through a blend of traditional
and modern values, while its
land is threatened by coastal
development. Exquisite writing
by an outstanding author who
ranks among the finest in New
Zealand today. She has also written
several other novels and short-story
collections.
Peter Hawes , Leapfrog
with Unicorns (Vintage Press,
NZ) and Tasman's Lay (Hazard
Press, NZ). Two from the unsung
hero, cult figure and probably
only member of the absurdist
movement in New Zealand, who
writes with great energy, wit
and surprising discipline about
almost anything that takes his
fancy. It's not much of a secret
that Peter is also W.P.
Hearst who has written
the not-to-be-missed Inca
Girls Aren't Easy (Vintage),
a series of joyous, sad and slippery
tales.
Keri Hulme , The
Bone People (Picador). Celebrated
winner of the 1985 Booker Prize,
and a wonderful first novel set
along the wild beaches of the
South Island's West Coast. Mysticism,
myth and earthy reality are transformed
into a haunting tale peopled
with richly drawn characters.
Witi Ihimaera , Bulibasha
- King of the Gypsies (Penguin).
The best introduction to one
of the country's finest Maori
authors. A rollicking good read,
energetically exploring the life
of a rebellious teenager in 1950s
rural New Zealand, where two
mighty sheep-shearing families
are locked in battle. It's an
intense look at adolescence,
cultural choices, family ties
and the abuse of power, culminating
in a masterful twist. Look out
also for the excellent The
Matriarch (Penguin) by the
same author.
Phil Kawana , Dead
Jazz Guys (Huia Publishers,
NZ). A relatively new kid on
the block, writing short stories
about the young urban Maori,
family, drugs and sex. Poignant
and intelligent writing in a
collection of mixed quality.
Fiona Kidman , The
Book of Secrets (Picador).
Historical novel tracing one
family's heritage through the
reclusive granddaughter of a
Scot who left the highlands with
commanding preacher Norman McLeod,
eventually ending up in Northland's
Waipu.
Elizabeth Knox , The
Vintner's Luck (Victoria
University Press). A very curious
book indeed that for no very
good reason became an international
best seller, all about "a
man, his vineyard, love, wine
and angels."
Shonagh Koea , The
Grandiflora Tree (Penguin).
A savagely witty yet deeply moving
study of the conventions of widowhood,
with a peculiar love story thrown
in. First novel from a journalist
and short-story writer renowned
for her astringent humour.
Katherine Mansfield , The
Collected Stories of Katherine
Mansfield (Penguin). All
73 short stories sit alongside
15 unfinished fragments in this
780-page tome. Concise yet penetrating
examinations of human behaviour
in apparently trivial situations,
often transmitting a painfully
pessimistic view of the world,
and startlingly modern for their
time.
Ngaio Marsh , Opening
Night; Artists in Crime; Vintage
Murder (Fontana). Just a
selection from the doyenne of
New Zealand crime fiction. Since
1934 she has been airing her
anglophile sensibilities and
killing off innumerable individuals
in the name of entertainment,
before solving the crimes with
Inspector Allen. Perfect mindless
reading matter for planes, trains
and buses.
Ronald Hugh Morrieson , Came
a Hot Friday (OUP). Superb
account of the idiosyncrasies
of country folk and the two smart
spielers who enter their lives,
in a comedy thriller focusing
on crime and sex in a small country
town.
John Mulgan , Man
Alone (Penguin). Seminal
and soberly written boy's-own
novel about one man's restless
and peripatetic times working
the New Zealand back blocks between
the wars, as the country lurched
from its pioneering days into
the modern world. First published
in 1939, it is often regarded
as one of the first truly Kiwi
novels and had a huge influence
on New Zealand writing, its evocation
of the Kiwi male quickly becoming
an archetype.
Vincent O'Sullivan , Let
the River Stand (Penguin).
Deftly conjuring the minutiae
of homestead and rural school
life in a Waikato farming community
of the 1930s, Sullivan weaves
disparate tales around the life
of his gawky anti-hero, Alex.
Tragic, humorous and captivating. Believers
to the Bright Coast (Penguin)
is O'Sullivan's disappointing
follow-up and little more than
an impenetrable confusion repeating
the themes and obsessions of
the first.
Emily Perkins , Not
Her Real Name (Picador).
Sub-Mansfield short-story writer
who inexplicably picked up an
award for this. Though lacking
the subtlety and incisiveness
of the master, this uneven collection
shows some promise. Sadly, however,
this promise subsequently failed
to materialize in her first novel, Leave
Before You Go (Picador).
Frank Sargeson , The
Stories of Frank Sargeson (Penguin).
Though not well-known outside
New Zealand, Sargeson is a giant
of Kiwi literature. His writing,
from the 1930s to the 1980s,
is incisive and sharply observed,
at its best in dialogue, which
is always true to the meter of
New Zealand speech. This work
brings together some of his finest
short stories. Once is Enough,
More than Enough and Never Enough! (all
Penguin) make up the complete
autobiography of a man sometimes
even more colourful than his
characters; Michael King has
written a fine biography, Frank
Sargeson: A Life (Viking).
Maurice Shadbolt , Strangers
and Journeys (Hodder/Atheneum).
On publication in 1972 this became
a defining novel in New Zealand's
literary ascendancy and its sense
of nationhood, putting Shadbolt
in the same league as Australia's
Patrick White. A tale of two
families of finely wrought characters,
whose lives interweave through
three generations. Very New Zealand,
very human and not overly epic.
Later works, which have consolidated
Shadbolt's reputation, include Mondays
Warriors, Season of the Jew and The
House of Strife (Hodder/Atheneum).
C.K. Stead , The
Singing Whakapapa (Penguin).
Highly regarded author of many
books and critical essays who
is sadly little known outside
New Zealand and Australia. A
combination of a powerful historical
novel about an early missionary,
and a dissatisfied modern descendant
who is searching for meaning
in his own life by exploring
the past. An excellent and engaging
read. His 1998 collection of
short stories, The Blinde
Blonde with Candles in her Hair, was
less critically acclaimed, but
still entertaining and readable.
Paul Thomas , Old
School Tie (Hodder Headline).
Smart thriller with some neat
comedic touches but a bit clichéd,
just like his last book Inside
Dope (Hodder Headline),
and lacking any really sympathetic
characters. Another relaxing
read, ideal while waiting for
a bus.
Damien Wilkins , The
Miserables (Faber). One
of the best novels to come out
of New Zealand, shorn of much
of the colonial baggage of many
writers. It is surprisingly mature
for a first novel, sharply evoking
middle-class New Zealand life
from the 1960s to the 1980s through
finely wrought characters.
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