Kiwi Kids Hanging Out With Writers
News Release
For immediate release
10 May 2006
KIWI KIDS HANGING OUT WITH WRITERS
Far-flung classrooms of Kiwi college kids are meeting within a virtual word space next Thursday to talk with two leading New Zealand poets.
Glenn Colquhoun and Jenny Bornholdt are taking part in a video conference with students from Central Hawkes Bay College, Hutt Valley High School, Kaitaia College, Tuakau College and Nelson’s Nayland College. They will discuss what makes a good poem, what it means to be a poet in the 21st century, answer students’ questions and read from their work.
The event is part of a ground-breaking programme called WordSpace, run by the New Zealand Book Council. Delivered in real time, the ten WordSpace sessions are held over the school year, and offer secondary students the opportunity to discuss topics such as poetry, reviewing and playwriting with distinguished New Zealand writers via video conferencing.
Any secondary school that is a member of the Book Council can take part in the sessions.
Book Council Chief Executive, Karen Ross, says WordSpace was designed to inspire and educate college students about New Zealand literature.
‘It’s invaluable not only for the contact between writers and students, but also for the exchange of ideas between classes unlikely to mix due to geographical circumstances.’
Poet biographies are attached.
News Release
For immediate
release
10 May 2006
WordSpace Poet Profiles
Glenn
Colquhoun
Glenn Colquhoun is a doctor, poet and author of
children's picture books Uncle Glenn and Me and Uncle Glenn
and Me Too. He says his first collection of poetry, The Art
of Walking Upright (1999) is 'about belonging, discovering a
place to stand, finding what it means to be Pakeha, and what
it means to be human'.
In 2004 he was awarded the Prize
in Modern Letters. Glenn has also won numerous awards for
his poetry, including both the Poetry Category and Readers'
Choice Award at the 2003 Montana New Zealand Book Awards for
his collection, Playing God.
Jenny Bornholdt
Jenny
Bornholdt is a poet and anthologist. Born in Wellington, she
holds a BA in English Literature and a Diploma in
Journalism. Her works include This Big Face (1988), Moving
House (1989), Waiting Shelter (1991), How We Met (1995),
Miss New Zealand: Selected Poems (1997) and These Days
(2000).
With her husband, poet Gregory O'Brien, she
co-edited My Heart Goes Swimming: New Zealand Love Poems
(1996), and, with Mark Williams and O'Brien, An Anthology of
New Zealand Poetry in English (1997), which won the 1997
Montana Book Award for Poetry. Jenny won the 2002 Meridian
Energy Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellowship, which
resulted in the collection Summer (2003). She was a
recipient of one of the 2003 Arts Foundation of New Zealand
Laureate Awards and in 2005 she became the fifth Te Mata
Estate New Zealand Poet
Laureate.
ENDS