2022 CLNZ/NZSA $5,000 Research Grants awarded to four New Zealand writers

2022 CLNZ/NZSA $5,000 Research Grants awarded to four New Zealand writers

Four New Zealand writers have each been awarded a $5,000 CLNZ/NZSA Research Grant for 2022.

2022 CLNZ/NZSA $5,000 Research Grants awarded to four New Zealand writers

The 2022 Copyright Licensing New Zealand and New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa (PEN NZ Inc) Research Grants have been awarded to four writers in Aotearoa.

The $5,000 grants support local writers who wish to undertake research for a fiction or non-fiction writing project.

The selection panel, Deborah Challinor, David Eggleton and Lana Lopesi, received 61 applications and reported "the quality of the applications this year to be very high. The applicants and their submissions overall demonstrated enthusiasm, talent, skill, and dedication to the art/craft of writing, all of which is extremely encouraging testament to the current vigour of Aotearoa New Zealand’s creative sector."

The wide range of topics presented in the applications included: local history, geology, family history, sport, death, biography, the impact of colonisation, climate change, Maori history, colonial history, lifestyle, taxidermy, family dysfunction, flora and fauna, Pasifika in Aotearoa New Zealand, and genomics. The task of selecting a mere four grantees .. was decidedly difficult."

Introducing the successful recipients

Maria Samuela
For her project Kana.

Maria Samuela's project, Kana, is a novel set in Aotearoa in the 1950s and explores the migration of young Cook Islands women to New Zealand during the 1930s to 1950s. Maria will use her research grant to travel to Rarotonga, where her mother grew up, to conduct research for the book. Earlier in 2022, Maria's collection of stories, Beats of the Pa‘u, was published by Te Herenga Waka University Press. Maria lives in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, and is of Cook Islands descent.

The 2022 selection panel said “.. the story of young Cook Islands women (and men) who migrated to Aotearoa from the 1930s to the 1950s (is) a significant and often overlooked period of Pacific migration to New Zealand. Maria Samuela is a refreshing voice and excellent writer with a proven track record, industry backing, and a nose for stories of national significance.”


Bonnie Etherington
For her project A fried Egg in Space.

Bonnie Etherington's book project, A Fried Egg in Space, navigates her brain tumour diagnosis and recovery as she reflects on environmental crisis amid the Covid-19 pandemic. This book is about reckoning with the sometimes toxic and threatening landscape of one’s own body, as collectively we must also reckon with living in and through increasing environmental precarity.

The selection panel said this about Bonnie's project, “The compelling, subtly-written and astute narrative travels from hospital in Colorado to the SpaceX launch site on Biak Island to the dark sky sanctuaries of Aotearoa New Zealand, and a sky cluttered by ever-increasing numbers of satellites.”


Sylvan Thomson
For his project The Third Kingdom

Sylvan Thomson is a writer based in Nelson. His project, The Third Kingdom, is a book about fungi in Aotearoa, focusing on the natural and cultural history of different species. This is not a purely scientific book but rather one bends genre, combining elements of memoir, reportage, and nature writing. His work can be found in A Public Space (USA), the New Zealand Review of Books, and Sport, among others. He is also at work on a novel.

The 2022 selection panel said Sylvan's work stood out in its exploration of the "traditional use of fungi by Māori, and consider(ation) how fungi feature in modern New Zealand society. He will also explore the concept that there are aspects of mycology (the study of fungi) ... reflecting elements of his own life."

Grant for a writer whose project is on diverse and new topics, and on issues or subjects that are topical in present day Aotearoa New Zealand.

Emma Espiner (Ngāti Tukorehe, Ngāti Porou)

For her project Practical skills for the zombie apocalypse (working title).

Dr Emma Espiner (Ngāti Tukorehe, Ngāti Porou) is a junior doctor at Middlemore Hospital, and an award-winning writer and podcast host. Emma’s writing features at The Guardian, Newsroom, Stuff, The Spinoff and in academic and literary journals. She has a background in politics, communications, media and Māori public health. Emma's project is a collection of essays, working title Practical skills for the zombie apocalypse. The essays broadly relate to the experience of training to become a doctor in Aotearoa.

Also selected under the ‘grant for a writer whose project is on diverse and new topics, and on issues or subjects that are topical in present day Aotearoa New Zealand,’ the selection panel said, “Espiner’s completed project promises to be well-informed, lyrical and nuanced, but also visceral in its depiction of inequalities for Māori within existing health institutions.

CLNZ and the NZSA are delighted to assist New Zealand authors in their research efforts towards their writing projects. Research Grants are funded through the CLNZ Cultural Fund, which derives its revenue from a 2% share of domestic licensing income and from overseas revenue that is non-title specific. CLNZ and NZSA would like to thank the 2022 Selection Panel - Deborah Challinor, David Eggleton and Lana Lopesi.

NZSA was proud to administer the CLNZ/NZSA Research Grants this year. CLNZ and NZSA would like to thank all the writers who took the time to apply.

You can read more about previous Research Grant recipients here.

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

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