Pip Desmond | |
---|---|
Occupation | Author, journalist |
Language | English |
Nationality | New Zealander |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Notable works | Trust: A True Story of Women & Gangs |
Notable awards | NZSA E.H. McCormick Best First Book of Non-Fiction Award Winner |
Pip Desmond is a New Zealand author and journalist.
Desmond graduated in 2006 from the International Institute of Modern Letters at the Victoria University of Wellington with an MA in Creative Writing. [1]
Desmond has worked as an editor and journalist and in 2000 became press secretary to Labour Minister Ruth Dyson. [1]
In 2011 Desmond published Trust: A True Story of Women & Gangs about her time as a member of Aroha Trust, a work cooperative for gang women in Wellington. [2] [3] [1] In 2010, the book won the NZSA E.H. McCormick Best First Book of Non-Fiction Award Winner at the New Zealand Post Book Awards. [4]
As part of the New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage’s 'From Memory' programme, Desmond conducted interviews with Korean War veterans and compiled her research in the book The War That Never Ended: New Zealand Veterans Remember Korea. [5] [6]
Desmond and her husband Pat Martin own the communications company 2write. [7]
Sir Julius Vogel was the eighth Premier of New Zealand. His administration is best remembered for the issuing of bonds to fund railway construction and other public works. He was the first Jewish prime minister of New Zealand. Historian Warwick R. Armstrong assesses Vogel's strengths and weaknesses:
Vogel's politics were like his nature, imaginative – and occasionally brilliant – but reckless and speculative. He was an excellent policymaker but he needed a strong leader to restrain him....Yet Vogel had vision. He saw New Zealand as a potential 'Britain of the South Seas', strong both in agriculture and in industry, and inhabited by a large and flourishing population.
Katherine Wilson Sheppard was the most prominent member of the women's suffrage movement in New Zealand and the country's most famous suffragist. Born in Liverpool, England, she emigrated to New Zealand with her family in 1868. There she became an active member of various religious and social organisations, including the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). In 1887 she was appointed the WCTU's National Superintendent for Franchise and Legislation, a position she used to advance the cause of women's suffrage in New Zealand.
The Ockham New Zealand Book Awards are a series of literary awards to works of New Zealand citizens. They were created in 1996, merging the Montana Book Awards and the New Zealand Book Awards into the Montana New Zealand Book Awards.
Amanda (Mandy) Hager is a writer of fiction and non-fiction for children, young adults and adults. Many of her books have been shortlisted for or won awards, including Singing Home the Whale which won both the Young Adult fiction category and the Margaret Mahy Book of the Year in the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults in 2015. She has been the recipient of several fellowships, residencies and prizes, including the Beatson Fellowship in 2012, the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship in 2014, the Waikato University Writer in Residence in 2015 and the Margaret Mahy Medal and Lecture Award in 2019.
Jacqueline Cecilia Sturm was a New Zealand poet, short story writer and librarian. She married New Zealand poet James K. Baxter in 1948 and is sometimes referred to by her married name Jacquie Baxter.
Robin Hyde was a South African-born New Zealand poet.
The National War Memorial of New Zealand is located next to the New Zealand Dominion Museum building on Buckle Street, in Wellington, the nation's capital. The war memorial was dedicated in 1932 on Anzac Day in commemoration of the First World War. It also officially remembers the New Zealanders who gave their lives in the South African War, World War II and the wars in Korea, Malaysia and Vietnam.
Lloyd David Jones is a New Zealand author. His novel Mister Pip (2006) won the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.
The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (DNZB) is an encyclopedia or biographical dictionary containing biographies of over 3,000 deceased New Zealanders. It was first published as a series of print volumes from 1990 to 2000, went online in 2002, and is now a part of Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. The dictionary superseded An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand of 1966, which had 900 biographies. The dictionary is managed by the Ministry for Culture and Heritage of the New Zealand Government. An earlier work of the same name in two volumes, published in 1940 by Guy Scholefield with government assistance, is unrelated.
Jessie Mackay was a New Zealand poet, journalist, feminist and animal rights activist. She is often referred to as New Zealand's first local-born poet and was one of the earliest writers to have a distinctly New Zealand style.
Carmen Rupe, born Trevor Rupe and often simply known as Carmen was a New Zealand-Australian drag performer, brothel keeper, anti-discrimination activist, would-be politician, and HIV/AIDS activist. Carmen Rupe was New Zealand's first iconic drag queen. She was a transgender woman.
Ellen Margaret Scanlan was a New Zealand journalist and novelist. Her most famous novels were the Pencarrow series of four novels, published between 1932 and 1939.
Mary Sutherland was a notable New Zealand forester and botanist. She was born in London, England in 1893.
Mary Ursula Bethell, was a New Zealand social worker and poet. Although she considered herself "by birth and choice English", and spent her life travelling between England and New Zealand, she was one of the first distinctively New Zealand poets and is recognised today as a pioneer of modern New Zealand poetry.
The 1977 Wellington City mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. In 1977, election were held for the Mayor of Wellington plus other local government positions including eighteen city councillors. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.
Sue Orr is a fiction writer and journalist from New Zealand. Married to Adrian Orr with three children.
Pip Adam is a novelist, short story writer, and reviewer from New Zealand.
Jane Tolerton is a New Zealand biographer, journalist and historian.
Jennifer Lillian Beck is a New Zealand writer of over 50 children’s books. Her work, often focusing on themes of history, peace and war, has won numerous prizes and awards. She lives in Auckland, New Zealand.
Tina Makereti is a New Zealand novelist, essayist, and short story writer, editor and creative writing teacher. Her work has been widely published and she has been the recipient of writing residencies in New Zealand and overseas. Her book Once Upon a Time in Aotearoa, won the inaugural fiction prize at the Ngā Kupu Ora Māori Book Awards in 2011 and Where the Rēkohu Bone Sings won the Ngā Kupu Ora Aotearoa Māori Book Award for Fiction in 2014. She lives on the Kapiti Coast, New Zealand.