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<channel><title><![CDATA[Deborah Shepard Books - Reviews & Interviews]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews]]></link><description><![CDATA[Reviews & Interviews]]></description><pubDate>Sat, 31 Jan 2026 16:49:09 +1300</pubDate><generator>Weebly</generator><item><title><![CDATA[Landfall review of The Writing Life - The Grit that Makes the Pearl]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-grit-that-makes-the-pearl]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-grit-that-makes-the-pearl#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 30 Apr 2019 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-grit-that-makes-the-pearl</guid><description><![CDATA[By Tasha Haines&#8203;In her introduction to&nbsp;The Writing Life, Deborah Shepard highlights the determination and passion of the twelve writers she interviews and curates into this collection. Shepard has selected a diverse group covering many genres: from writing for children, to many approaches to the novel, poetry and non-fiction. The writers are Joy Cowley, Marilyn Duckworth, Tessa Duder, Chris Else, Patricia Grace, David Hill, Witi Ihimaera, Fiona Kidman, Owen Marshall, Vincent O&rsquo;S [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><strong>By Tasha Haines</strong><br />&#8203;<br />In her introduction to&nbsp;<em>The Writing Life</em>, Deborah Shepard highlights the determination and passion of the twelve writers she interviews and curates into this collection. Shepard has selected a diverse group covering many genres: from writing for children, to many approaches to the novel, poetry and non-fiction. The writers are Joy Cowley, Marilyn Duckworth, Tessa Duder, Chris Else, Patricia Grace, David Hill, Witi Ihimaera, Fiona Kidman, Owen Marshall, Vincent O&rsquo;Sullivan, Philip Temple and Albert Wendt.<br />&#8203;<br />The interviews show that adversity breeds a certain compulsion, which becomes the grit that seeds the pearl of craft. Shepard refers early on to a line in Owen Marshall&rsquo;s Janet Frame Memorial Lecture of 2007, in which he refers to the &lsquo;hammering out&rsquo; of New Zealand writing: "When I reread those comparatively early New Zealand writers, who, unlike Katherine Mansfield, chose to stay in New Zealand, people like Frank Sargeson, RAK Mason, James K. Baxter, Robin Hyde, O.E. Middleton, Charles Brasch, Allen Curnow, E.H. McCormick, I have a sense of work being cut and hammered out of adversity."</div>  <div>  <!--BLOG_SUMMARY_END--></div>  <div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Marshall refers to his predecessors, but Shepard locates something similar in the lives of her selection of writers, all of whom were born in the 1930s&ndash;40s and share commonalities of adversity, whether it be childhood poverty, the austerity brought about by WWII, a difficult or absent parent, racism, sexism, abuse, controversy, loss/death, or the being &lsquo;other&rsquo; of being a writer&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">here</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">In each interview Shepard builds her questioning from childhood, colonialism, politics, through the fledgling stages of early writing and into careers, passions, relationships and writing practice. She enters the text only in discrete but informed insertions or with new questions, which are never superfluous. I like the way she indicates where the interviewee laughs throughout the book with a simple&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">[laughs]</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">; this helps the reader stay close.</span><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">&#8203;</span><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Each writer is presented in an admirable manner that is easy to relate to and that inadvertently reveals Shepard&rsquo;s own kindness, intelligence and sensitivity. There are a few incidences, for example, where a response might be heading near dangerous territory, and rather than letting that play out, Shepard seamlessly steers the conversation away. This reads as kind rather than censorial. Sensitive material is handled well too. For example, with regards to the controversy about uncited material in Ihimaera&rsquo;s&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">The Trowenna Sea</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">, her questions help shed light on the impact such an event might have on a person. Ihimaera says it &lsquo;reminded me that I am human&rsquo;, and went on to produce his best work.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Then there&rsquo;s O&rsquo;Sullivan&rsquo;s long list of male writers whom he admires and one female, Mansfield. This seems a bit awkward given his interview&rsquo;s context &ndash; in a book alongside some highly estimable female writers. It stands out. But perhaps by not asking about this, Shepard&rsquo;s role as interviewer avoids veering into judgement. O&rsquo;Sullivan&rsquo;s interview is otherwise full of generous and honest conversation.</span><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">&#8203;</span><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">A few of the writers come across as self-censoring, like veterans of the interview, but never without sharing something significant of themselves. This connects to what they say about living in the public arena and needing to protect the privacy of family and friends. A few are more gregarious, punctuating the conversation with surprisingly &lsquo;carefree&rsquo; revelations. In each interview there are gems that pop out, such as Else doing a stint in Albania; Hill being a &lsquo;badgeophile&rsquo; with a rugged-looking mother; O&rsquo;Sullivan&rsquo;s family growing &lsquo;the odd vegetable&rsquo;; Kidman learning to shoot a gun early on; and Temple forecasting the death of the apostrophe. There are many other wonderful and light-hearted moments.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Shepard&rsquo;s questions fall within dominant themes and are similar for each interviewee &ndash; but with tweaks that reveal her rigorous &lsquo;homework&rsquo; on the oeuvre and biographical detail of each writer. She prefaces each interview with a scene-setting prelude. For example, before the interview with O&rsquo;Sullivan she writes, &lsquo;Vincent is a master of many genres, and I was in awe of him&rsquo;; before Kidman, &lsquo;This was the interview with a feminist icon I&rsquo;d been anticipating.&rsquo;</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">A short childhood is common to most of the writers. Many discuss the travail of what was their &lsquo;working class&rsquo; or village-bound life, and how this was a time of simple joys but also of sheer hard work. From the age of around five many worked at chores to help keep the family afloat. Schooling was brief where parents favoured their child&rsquo;s early fulltime employment; others were encouraged to exceed the working class &lsquo;lot&rsquo;. But whether short, tough or wonderful, childhood was where many of these writers began to &lsquo;write&rsquo;. Kidman discovered, while lying in hospital at the age of six, that sending her parents a letter asking them to come and get her worked: &lsquo;&hellip; writing works, people do something&rsquo;.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">The mind of a child as a filter and maker of &lsquo;truth&rsquo; is evidently key in the formative years of many of these writers. Grace recounts how she mis-remembered the details of a tangi, making it more real (and more beautiful) to herself by the addition of angel wings and a mystical canoe:</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">What I recall of that day didn&rsquo;t happen in reality. I recalled, not a coffin, but a green and white canoe, pointed at each end, being lifted by two P&#257;keh&#257; men in tweed overcoats and carried towards the beach. Bunched under the men&rsquo;s overcoats were angel wings. I recounted all of this to my mother.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Shepard&rsquo;s groundwork enriches the interviews. She says to Cowley: &lsquo;In your memoir you wrote &ldquo;as a child I never felt young&rdquo;,&rsquo; to which Cowley immediately responds, &lsquo;I always felt old&rsquo;. To Ihimaera, who wrote his first stories on his bedroom walls, she suggests he was perhaps mimicking his mother, who wrote the family genealogy on the hallway wall. Ihimaera responds that she is the first to make that connection.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">It emerges that family and commitments make room (even in busyness) for the writing life, supplying it with material and the writer with their identity. But there is also a sense of compulsion: &lsquo;Wanting to be a writer, well, that&rsquo;s like wanting to be a breather,&rsquo; says Cowley. Wendt says he wrote &lsquo;to change people&rsquo;s views&rsquo; about Samoan culture with its astonishingly high suicide rate and domestic violence. According to Duckworth, &lsquo;When you stop writing it&rsquo;s as if you&rsquo;ve stepped out of view, been sucked off the screen, obliterated &hellip; you&rsquo;re only a writer while you&rsquo;re writing and being published&rsquo;. Oh no!</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">There are blended selves and blended families among the writers, and we are shown how the writer-self is a conduit for multiplicity &ndash; even a multi-genred repertoire forged in order to feed mouths. For example, when Shepard comments that Temple&rsquo;s ten novels are quite different in style, he says he&rsquo;s always been an &lsquo;explorer&rsquo;, and his diversity also has to do with the need for economic survival in New Zealand.</span><br /><br /><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">The Writing Life</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">&nbsp;shows that far from being born prolific (intrinsic talent aside), these writers have &lsquo;made it&rsquo; as a result of hard work and determination. Many were not university trained, confirmation perhaps of the innateness of a writing life. Each of the writers has amassed an impressive number of merits, awards, and honours, carving out their place in the context of practice in Aotearoa New Zealand and effectively paving the way for others.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Almost all of these writing careers have been problematised through the politics of New Zealand as a colonial outpost: a far-flung place that educated its young according to an English model. For many, the childhood home did not hold many books, and New Zealand writing wasn&rsquo;t taught in schools until university &ndash; and seldom even then. The writers read European and American classics. Given their isolated context, carving out a niche for a unique voice was always going to be difficult. Ihimaera says: &lsquo;My work was considered folk art, not English lit.&rsquo; A British-colonial lens was the default, indigeneity and difference were smothered, and the potential of the marginal voice was unknown until the work of writers such as these twelve infiltrated &lsquo;New Zealand-ness&rsquo;, helping to articulate a broader identity.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">There is a general weariness about reviews. Shepard asks each writer about them. Duckworth feels that &lsquo;reviewers mostly misread&rsquo; the ending of her book&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Married Alive</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">. (The idea of &lsquo;misreading&rsquo; is interesting for the tension it sets up between the writer letting go of, rather than trying to control, reader perception.) According to Duder, negative reviews &lsquo;can strike at the heart of you&rsquo;. Grace says: &lsquo;Reviews are not written for me. My job is done.&rsquo; And as Kidman experienced with one ill-informed and cruel review, &lsquo;You can, however, recover from anything if you put your mind to it.&rsquo; Adversity becoming determination, again.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">These twelve writers have become intrinsic to</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">&nbsp;</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">our</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">&nbsp;</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">literary canon, holding among them examples of ground-breaking work from M&#257;ori, P&#257;keh&#257;, Samoan, female, feminist, male, and other categorical points of view. But there is also a sense among the writers of being global citizens as well; maintaining an outward view to &lsquo;over there&rsquo; alongside an inward one that treasures (or reacts against) the uniqueness of&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">here</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Deborah Shepard&rsquo;s&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">The Writing Life&nbsp;</em><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">is a warm and approachable resource about a time and place in New Zealand writing that exemplifies the beginning of literary diversity and inclusion here. We are shown how a literary art is born both because of and despite adversity, and fed by passion and determination.</span><br /><br /><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Original source:&nbsp;&#8203;</span><a href="https://landfallreview.com/the-grit-that-makes-the-pearl/">https://landfallreview.com/the-grit-that-makes-the-pearl/</a></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Plains FM Bookenz interview with Ruth Todd]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/plains-fm-bookenz-interview]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/plains-fm-bookenz-interview#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Tue, 02 Apr 2019 20:58:01 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/plains-fm-bookenz-interview</guid><description><![CDATA[Deborah chats with &#8203;Ruth Todd about The Writing Life    LISTEN TO INTERVIEW   [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)">Deborah chats with &#8203;</span><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">Ruth Todd about The Writing Life</span></div>  <div style="text-align:left;"><div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div> <a class="wsite-button wsite-button-small wsite-button-normal" href="http://accessradio.org/Player.aspx?eid=9cc0a5e6-2b40-49cf-b713-6008525b9bed" target="_blank"> <span class="wsite-button-inner">LISTEN TO INTERVIEW</span> </a> <div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Book review by Louise O'Brien on Radio NZ Nine to Noon]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-by-louise-obrien-on-radio-nz-nine-to-noon]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-by-louise-obrien-on-radio-nz-nine-to-noon#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 2019 23:26:08 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-by-louise-obrien-on-radio-nz-nine-to-noon</guid><description><![CDATA[  LISTEN TO INTERVIEW   [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="text-align:left;"><div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div> <a class="wsite-button wsite-button-small wsite-button-normal" href="https://www.radionz.co.nz/audio/player?audio_id=2018673190" target="_blank"> <span class="wsite-button-inner">LISTEN TO INTERVIEW</span> </a> <div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Interview with Karen Craig for the Auckland Central Library Books and Beyond podcasts]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/interview-with-karen-craig-for-the-auckland-central-library-books-and-beyond-podcasts]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/interview-with-karen-craig-for-the-auckland-central-library-books-and-beyond-podcasts#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 31 Jan 2019 23:17:56 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/interview-with-karen-craig-for-the-auckland-central-library-books-and-beyond-podcasts</guid><description><![CDATA[The Writing Life&nbsp;was selected as one of the top ten, in the Auckland Libraries Top 100 for 2018, a list of recommended reads curated by librarians and drawn from readers&rsquo; favourite books.Biographer, oral historian and memoirist Deborah Shepard talks with Karen about her new book &ldquo;The writing life&rdquo;, in which twelve of New Zealand's most acclaimed and admired writers speak candidly about their lives and their work.    LISTEN TO INTERVIEW   [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><strong><em>The Writing Life</em>&nbsp;was selected as one of the top ten, in the Auckland Libraries Top 100 for 2018, a list of recommended reads curated by librarians and drawn from readers&rsquo; favourite books.<br /><br /></strong><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">Biographer, oral historian and memoirist Deborah Shepard talks with Karen about her new book &ldquo;The writing life&rdquo;, in which twelve of New Zealand's most acclaimed and admired writers speak candidly about their lives and their work.</span><br /></div>  <div style="text-align:left;"><div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div> <a class="wsite-button wsite-button-small wsite-button-normal" href="http://www.planetaudio.org.nz/listen/books-and-beyond/deborah-shepard/455315" target="_blank"> <span class="wsite-button-inner">LISTEN TO INTERVIEW</span> </a> <div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Book Review: The Writing Life – Twelve New Zealand Authors, by Deborah Shepard]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 2018 11:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/book-review-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard</guid><description><![CDATA[Available in bookshops nationwide.There are so many things to like about this book,&nbsp;The Writing Life Twelve New Zealand Authors. Deborah Shepard has interviewed the twelve authors and produced a book incorporating the very personal interviews, accompanying photographs and extra information. The book itself is well made, with a soft cover beneath a matching dust cover, and with pleasingly thick paper reminiscent of the days when new books arrived with uncut pages. It has a heft which promise [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(255, 102, 0); font-weight:inherit"><a href="https://www.booksellers.co.nz/find-bookshop">Available in bookshops nationwide.</a></span><br /><br />There are so many things to like about this book,&nbsp;<em>The Writing Life Twelve New Zealand Authors</em>. Deborah Shepard has interviewed the twelve authors and produced a book incorporating the very personal interviews, accompanying photographs and extra information. The book itself is well made, with a soft cover beneath a matching dust cover, and with pleasingly thick paper reminiscent of the days when new books arrived with uncut pages. It has a heft which promises a feast of good things and it doesn&rsquo;t disappoint.<br /><br />The twelve authors are men and women who have written in various genres throughout the years 1959 to 2018, on topics addressing such themes as death and loss, the joy they have found in writing and much more. For aspiring authors there is also advice on writing itself, which, given the depth of talent and length of time these ones have been engaged in their craft, is an invaluable treasure.<br />Distinguished photographer, John McDermott, was commissioned to take photographs of each of the authors, and the setting each one has chosen to be presented in gives further insight into their personality, as do the photos of the rooms in which a particular writer produces his or her work. I enjoyed examining those photos, searching for a further glimpse into each life. As an older person myself, who has read and admired much of the work of these twelve, I know that this beautiful tribute to them will be a book that I will delve into time and time again over the years ahead. It will be an asset, too, to teachers of literature as well as those who desire to write.<br /><br />These twelve men and women have laid down a huge body of work for those who are coming on behind them and we owe them a debt of gratitude both for the work they have done throughout their life and for their willingness to tell us their stories.&nbsp;<em>The Writing Life</em>&nbsp;is more than a book, it is a treasure.<br /><br /><strong>Reviewed by Lesley Vlietstra</strong><br /><br /><strong><em>The Writing Life &ndash; Twelve New Zealand Authors</em></strong><br />by Deborah Shepard<br />Published by Massey University Press<br />ISBN 9780995109537<br /><br />Original source: The Reader - <strong><a href="https://booksellersnz.wordpress.com/2018/12/13/book-review-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard/" target="_blank">The Booksellers New Zealand Blog</a></strong></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The Writing Life: Twelve New Zealand Authors – a reading by Albert Wendt and a review]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-a-reading-by-albert-wendt-and-a-review]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-a-reading-by-albert-wendt-and-a-review#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Wed, 05 Dec 2018 11:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-a-reading-by-albert-wendt-and-a-review</guid><description><![CDATA[Auckland poet Paula Green reviews&nbsp;The Writing Life&nbsp;&mdash; offering a wonderfully warm and personal response to the authors and their life&rsquo;s work.Twelve authors talk to biographer and historian,&nbsp;Deborah Shephard, about writing and living. It is a captivating new book. Deborah has done an excellent job drawing out stories and raising issues; from what it means to write alongside domestic and money-earning demands to coping with both success and failure. She is familiar with t [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(68, 68, 68)"></span><strong><font size="4"><span style="color:rgb(34, 34, 34)">Auckland poet Paula Green reviews&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(34, 34, 34)">The Writing Life</em></font></strong><span style="color:rgb(34, 34, 34)"><strong><font size="4">&nbsp;&mdash; offering a wonderfully warm and personal response to the authors and their life&rsquo;s work.<br /></font></strong></span><span style="color:rgb(68, 68, 68)"><br />Twelve authors talk to biographer and historian,&nbsp;</span><span style="color:rgb(51, 204, 204)">Deborah Shephard</span><span style="color:rgb(68, 68, 68)">, about writing and living. It is a captivating new book. Deborah has done an excellent job drawing out stories and raising issues; from what it means to write alongside domestic and money-earning demands to coping with both success and failure. She is familiar with the authors&rsquo; books and the context of the times in which they were written. The interviews often feel like a warm and stimulating conversation rather than a pre-prepared interview. John McDermott took stunning photographs to accompany the text.</span></div>  <div style="text-align:left;"><div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div> <a class="wsite-button wsite-button-small wsite-button-normal" href="https://nzpoetryshelf.com/2018/12/06/the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-a-reading-by-albert-wendt-and-a-review/" target="_blank"> <span class="wsite-button-inner">listen to reading and read full review</span> </a> <div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[RNZ Author Interview: The Writing Life - Tessa Duder and Deborah Shepard]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/rnz-author-interview-the-writing-life-tessa-duder-and-deborah-shepard]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/rnz-author-interview-the-writing-life-tessa-duder-and-deborah-shepard#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 22 Nov 2018 11:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/rnz-author-interview-the-writing-life-tessa-duder-and-deborah-shepard</guid><description><![CDATA[A pioneering generation of writers raised after the Second World War have founded the rich diverse literary landscape that we have today. A dozen of them are the subject of a new book telling their own stories of their lives, published by Massey university Press. The Writing Life is an oral history project in which writers ranging from Witi ihimeara to Joy Cowley, Patricia Grace to Vincent O'Sullivan speak frankly about their own life journeys, the challenges and the opportunities. The book feat [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(64, 68, 65)">A pioneering generation of writers raised after the Second World War have founded the rich diverse literary landscape that we have today. A dozen of them are the subject of a new book telling their own stories of their lives, published by Massey university Press. The Writing Life is an oral history project in which writers ranging from Witi ihimeara to Joy Cowley, Patricia Grace to Vincent O'Sullivan speak frankly about their own life journeys, the challenges and the opportunities. The book features some rather beautiful portraits by photographer John McDermott. We're joined by the author oral historian Deborah Shepard and one of those rather special writers Tessa Duder.</span></div>  <div style="text-align:left;"><div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div> <a class="wsite-button wsite-button-small wsite-button-normal" href="https://www.radionz.co.nz/national/programmes/standing-room-only/audio/2018671732/the-writing-life-tessa-duder-and-deborah-shepard" target="_blank"> <span class="wsite-button-inner">LISTEN TO INTERVIEW ON RNZ</span> </a> <div style="height: 10px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[AFTERGLOW: The Writing Life: Twelve New Zealand Authors by Deborah Shepard]]></title><link><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/afterglow-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard]]></link><comments><![CDATA[https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/afterglow-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard#comments]]></comments><pubDate>Thu, 08 Nov 2018 11:00:00 GMT</pubDate><category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/reviews--interviews/afterglow-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard</guid><description><![CDATA[On Thursday November 8th, Unity hosted a lunchtime discussion between author Deborah Shepard, Massey University Press publisher Nicola Legat, Dame Fiona Kidman, and Patricia Grace about Shepard&rsquo;s new book&nbsp;The Writing Life: Twelve New Zealand Authors.&nbsp;   				 				  Shepard conducted interviews with twelve of New Zealand&rsquo;s greatest living authors, including Grace and Kidman, about their lives, careers, and the art of writing itself. Patricia Grace read a poem by the seminal p [...] ]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">On Thursday November 8</span><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">th</span><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">, Unity hosted a lunchtime discussion between author Deborah Shepard, Massey University Press publisher Nicola Legat, Dame Fiona Kidman, and Patricia Grace about Shepard&rsquo;s new book&nbsp;</span><em style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">The Writing Life: Twelve New Zealand Authors</em><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">.&nbsp;</span></div>  <div><div style="height: 0px; overflow: hidden;"></div> 				<div id='606974389615214083-gallery' class='imageGallery' style='line-height: 0px; padding: 0; margin: 0'><div id='606974389615214083-imageContainer0' style='float:left;width:24.95%;margin:0;'><div id='606974389615214083-insideImageContainer0' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 75%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life_3_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery606974389615214083]' title='(L-R): Patricia Grace, Dame Fiona Kidman, Nicola Legat, Deborah Shepard'><img src='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life_3.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='450' _height='449' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.52%;left:0%' /></a></div></div></div></div><div id='606974389615214083-imageContainer1' style='float:left;width:24.95%;margin:0;'><div id='606974389615214083-insideImageContainer1' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 75%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-2_3_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery606974389615214083]' title='Deborah discussing her writing and interviewing process.'><img src='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-2_3.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='369' _height='370' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.85%;left:0%' /></a></div></div></div></div><div id='606974389615214083-imageContainer2' style='float:left;width:24.95%;margin:0;'><div id='606974389615214083-insideImageContainer2' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 75%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-3_3_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery606974389615214083]' title='Patricia Grace reading a poem by Hone Tuwhare.'><img src='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-3_3.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='450' _height='449' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.52%;left:0%' /></a></div></div></div></div><div id='606974389615214083-imageContainer3' style='float:left;width:24.95%;margin:0;'><div id='606974389615214083-insideImageContainer3' style='position:relative;margin:5px;'><div class='galleryImageHolder galleryCaptionHover' style='position:relative; width:100%; padding:0 0 75%;overflow:hidden;'><div class='galleryInnerImageHolder'><a href='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-5_3_orig.jpg' rel='lightbox[gallery606974389615214083]' title='Grace and Kidman signing copies of &lsquo;The Writing Life&rsquo;.'><img src='https://www.deborahshepardbooks.com/uploads/5/7/1/0/5710041/deborah-shepard-the-writing-life-5_3.jpg' class='galleryImage' _width='449' _height='450' style='position:absolute;border:0;width:100%;top:-16.82%;left:0%' /></a></div></div></div></div><span style='display: block; clear: both; height: 0px; overflow: hidden;'></span></div> 				<div style="height: 20px; overflow: hidden;"></div></div>  <div class="paragraph"><span style="color:rgb(0, 0, 0)">Shepard conducted interviews with twelve of New Zealand&rsquo;s greatest living authors, including Grace and Kidman, about their lives, careers, and the art of writing itself. Patricia Grace read a poem by the seminal poet, Hone Tuwhare, as it was one of the first pieces of literature she loved and was an inspiration for her to become a writer. Fiona Kidman read a moving poem about her late husband Ian. All three remarked on Shepard&rsquo;s candour, respect, and passion as a writer, emphasising how wonderful their experience was working with Shepard to produce this remarkable book.<br />&#8203;</span><br /><strong style="color:rgb(42, 42, 42)"><font size="2"><a href="http://unitybooks.nz/counterculture/afterglow-the-writing-life-twelve-new-zealand-authors-by-deborah-shepard/" target="_blank">Originally posted by Unity Wellington</a></font></strong></div>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>