Tuesday, June 10, 2008


FIRST NOVEL SHORTLISTED FOR MONTANA NZ BOOK AWARDS
‘From inner city graffiti to the pristine peaks of the Southern Alps, from a remote nineteenth century whaling station to the impact on our wetlands of decades of use and abuse, from the recognition of ta moko to an insight into the work of one of our most reclusive artists...We have been impressed by the passion, dedication and expertise that have so clearly gone into the finalists’ publications,’ says the judging panel comprising arts critic and journalist Lynn Freeman, publisher David Elworthy and fiction writer Tim Corbalis.

Emerging writers dominate this year’s fiction and poetry finalist categories. Among them are debut novelist Mary McCallum with The Blue, Alice Tawhai with her second story collection, Luminous and Johanna Aitchison with her debut poetry collection, A Long Girl Ago.
‘The judges were attracted by the vivacity and assurance of the work coming from these relatively new writers. They each have a distinctive voice and something to say,’ says Ms Freeman.

Now in their 12th year, The Montana-sponsored awards have a strict set of guidelines. The judging panel takes into account enduring literary merit and overall authorship; quality of illustration and graphic presentation; production values; general design; the standard of editing and the impact of the book on the community.
The judging of New Zealand’s best books published during the 2007 calendar year is carried out across eight categories – Fiction, Poetry, Biography, History, Reference & Anthology, Environment, Illustrative, and Lifestyle & Contemporary Culture.


The full list of finalists in the 2008 Montana New Zealand Book Awards by category are:
Fiction:
The Blue
by Mary McCallum (Penguin Group (NZ))
Edwin & Matilda by Laurence Fearnley (Penguin Group (NZ))
Luminous by Alice Tawhai (Huia Publishers)
Opportunity by Charlotte Grimshaw (Random House NZ)

Poetry:
Cold Snack
by Janet Charman (Auckland University Press)
A Long Girl Ago by Johanna Aitchison (Victoria University Press)
The Pop-Up Book of Invasions by Fiona Farrell (Auckland University Press)

Biography:
The Best Man Who Ever Served the Crown? A Life of Donald McLean
by Ray Fargher (Victoria University Press)
The Life and Times of James Walter Chapman-Taylor by Judy Siers (Millwood Heritage Productions Ltd)
Waimarino County & Other Excursions by Martin Edmond (Auckland University Press)

History:
Age of Enterprise: Rediscovering the New Zealand Entrepreneur 1881-1910
by Ian Hunter (Auckland University Press)
Devils on Horses by Terry Kinloch (Exisle Publishing)
Te Tau Ihu o Te Waka Volume II: Te Ara Hou - The New Society by Hilary and John Mitchell (Huia Publishers)

Environment:
Southern Alps
by Alison Ballance (Random House NZ)
The Surface of the Sea: Encounters with New Zealand's Upper Ocean Life by Iain Anderson (Raupo Publishing)
Wetlands of New Zealand by Janet Hunt (Random House NZ)

Illustrative:
Aberhart
by Laurence Aberhart, with essays by Gregory O'Brien and Justin Paton (Victoria University Press)
Bill Hammond: Jingle Jangle Morning by Jennifer Hay, with Ron Brownson, Chris Knox and Laurence Aberhart; designed by Aaron Beehre (Christchurch Art Gallery)
Comma dot dogma edited by Aaron Kreisler (Umbrella)

Lifestyle and Contemporary Culture:
InForm: New Zealand Graffiti Artists Discuss Their Work
by Elliot O’Donnell (Raupo Publishing)
Mau Moko: The World of Māori Tattoo by Ngahuia Te Awekotuku (Penguin Group (NZ))
Shot In New Zealand: The art and craft of the Kiwi cinematographer by Duncan Petrie (Random House NZ)

Reference and Anthology:
Look This Way: New Zealand Writers on New Zealand Artists
edited by Sally Blundell (Auckland University Press)
A Nest of Singing Birds: 100 years of the New Zealand School Journal by Gregory O’Brien (Learning Media Limited)
The Transit of Venus edited by Mary Varnham (Awa Press)

The winner in each category receives a prize of $5,000. Each category winner is eligible for the Montana Medal for non fiction or the Montana Medal for poetry or fiction, both of which carry a prize of $10,000. The winners will be announced at a gala dinner to be held at the Wellington Town Hall on Monday, 21 July 2008.
The winners of the New Zealand Society of Authors (NZSA) Best First Book Awards will be announced at this ceremony. There are no finalists in these categories this year.
The principal sponsors of the Montana New Zealand Book Awards are Montana and Creative New Zealand. The awards are managed by Booksellers New Zealand and supported by Book Publishers Association of New Zealand, the New Zealand Society of Authors and Book Tokens (NZ) Ltd.
The winner of the poetry category will be announced on Montana Poetry Day on Friday 18 July 2008.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well that's a bit odd. Where is "New Zealand's Wilderness Heritage"? Difficult to maintain enthusiasm for the awards when such an extraordinarily good book doesn't even make the shortlist. We know everyone feels their favourite books deserve a place on the shortlist but surely this is a glaring ommission!!

Vanda Symon said...

There were no finalists in the best first book category. Do you know if there was a particular reason for this? Did they change the criteria or format, or did they decide there were none up to the bar, with the exception of The Blue?

Beattie's Book Blog said...

Here is a response from this year's Montana New Zealand Book Awards judging panel as to why there were no best first book finalists this year: "This year an insufficient number of submissions met the judging critieria for a shortlist, so the judges decided to award winners only."

Anonymous said...

Plus with finalists in the poetry and fiction categories being first books, it seems pointless having a shortlist when it is obvious who is going to win...

Anonymous said...

Congratulations to all the finalists!

Anonymous said...

I also congratulate all the finalists. Many very fine poetry books didn't make the list (Andrew Johnston, C. K. Stead, Bernadette Hall and Vincent O'Sullivan to name a few) but that's the cut! I was delighted to see those that did as in all my poetry reading for BNZP last year I found much to admire about the three selected books.

Anonymous said...

Hi Vanda - re your BFB comment - to my recollection there never has been a best first book shortlist except as an experiment last year. FredP