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The New Zealand Society of Authors (PEN New Zealand Inc.) promotes and protects the interests of New Zealand writers. It was founded as the New Zealand PEN Centre (Poets, Essays and Novelists) in 1934. [1] It broadened its scope and became the New Zealand Society of Authors in 1994, [2] under the presidency of writer Philip Temple. There are ...
Douglas Cresswell (1894–1960), author, historian and broadcaster; Mary Cresswell (born 1937), science editor and poet; Walter D'Arcy Cresswell (1896–1960), poet, journalist and writer; Fiona Cross (fl. 2000s), arachnologist and non-fiction writer; Barry Crump (1935–1996), author of semi-autobiographical comic novels
Desktop publishing (DTP) application allows opening and editing of PDF documents; Allows compatible saving as PDF 1.3, 1.4, 1.5 and 1.7 and supports also PDF/X1, PDF/X1a and PDF/X-3. pdf-parser: Public Domain Python script Yes Extraction and analysis tool, handles corrupt and malicious PDF documents. PDFedit: GNU GPL: Yes Yes BSD Yes
Ænglisc; العربية; Aragonés; Asturianu; বাংলা; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български; Brezhoneg; Català; Čeština
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Academics / Non-fiction writers: Historians: By nationality: New Zealand Also: New Zealand: People: By ...
His book A Booming in the Night won the Best Picture Book Award at the 2006 New Zealand Post Book Awards for Children and Young Adults. [7] [8] Brown held a Michael King Writers’ Centre Māori Writer’s Residency in 2011 during which he wrote the poetry collection Between the Kindling and the Blaze: Reflections on the Concept of Mana. [9]
His Penguin History of New Zealand was the most popular New Zealand book of 2004 and was named by The New Zealand Herald in 2009 as the best book of the preceding decade. [69] Recent essay collections by Asian New Zealand writers include All Who Live on Islands (2019) by Rose Lu and Small Bodies of Water (2021) by Nina Mingya Powles. [70] [71]
The poem records the arrival of the first Europeans in New Zealand. [7] It is one of the best-known of all New Zealand poems. [8] Tom Weston noted in 1985 that in its early years, "Landfall in Unknown Seas" was "something of a motto": "There was a sense of discovery, of sorting out a place [for New Zealand literature] in this world." [9]