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Bill Manhire
2005 Laureate
Poet
Bill Manhire was born in Invercargill in 1946, and grew up in small hotels in Otago and Southland, an experience beautifully evoked in his short memoir, Under the Influence. His first book of poems, The Elaboration, was published in 1972, and contained drawings (including a portrait of the poet) by Icon Artist Ralph Hotere.
Over the years, Bill has worked often with Ralph Hotere, especially in the MALADY poems and paintings, and in the dance-performance work Song Cycle.
He has published many collections of poems, winning the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry four times. He is also the author of a prize-winning collection of short stories. He was the inaugural Te Mata Estate New Zealand Poet Laureate, and in 2004 was the Meridian Energy Katherine Mansfield Fellow in Menton, France.
Bill is probably one of the few poets ever to reach the South Pole. A long-standing interest in Antarctica took him to the ice in 1998 as one of Antarctica New Zealand's inaugural arts fellows. The experience is reflected in a major sequence of poems, Antarctic Field Notes, and in the innovative anthology The Wide White Page: Writers Imagine Antarctica, which includes work from the great Italian poet Dante through to more recent writers like Edgar Allan Poe, Vladimir Nabokov, and Pablo Neruda. Bill also wrote the moving poem Erebus Voices for Sir Edmund Hillary to read at the commemorative service at Scott Base to mark the 25th anniversary of the Erebus tragedy.
Bill has been a significant figure in promoting New Zealand poetry and literature - not only through his internationally acclaimed creative writing course at Victoria University but also through his work as a critic, anthologist, and broadcaster, and in his appearances at writing festivals around the world.
In June 2005 Bill Manhire was appointed a Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit and in that year he received an Honorary Doctorate of Literature from the University of Otago. The following year, Bill’s book Lifted was selected in the Poetry Category of the 2006 Montana Book Awards.
In 2007, Bill was involved with the editing and publication of Janet Frame's posthumous collection of poems, The Goose Bath, and joint project leader of Are Angels OK?, a sci-art collaboration between leading New Zealand writers and physicists. He also worked with composer Eve de Castro-Robinson writing a piece for children's voices and orchestra. Their work These Arms to Hold You was chosen as one of three finalists announced for the SOUNZ Contemporary Award. In the same year he was one of three writers honoured with a 2007 Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement. Each received $60,000 in recognition of their significant contribution to New Zealand literature.
For more in-depth information on Bill visit the Book Council |
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