Epic Achievement for Eleanor Catton's Student, Despite Loss
Kirsti Whalen
Epic Achievement for Eleanor Catton's Student, Despite Loss.
18 May 2014
Kirsti Whalen, a second-year creative writing student at MIT, has been applauded by her mentors and colleagues in the Faculty of Creative Arts, which include celebrated writers Robert Sullivan, Anne Kennedy, Albert Wendt, Witi Ihimaera, and the winner of the 2013 Man Booker Prize, Eleanor Catton, for being shortlisted for the Sarah Broom Poetry Prize... despite not winning the award.
Iconic poet, Sam Hunt announced veteran author CK Stead as the winner and established poet Emma Neale and Kirsti Whalen as runners-up at the Auckland Writers Festival in Auckland this afternoon.
Eleanor Catton said she was, “absolutely
thrilled” that Kirsti was one of three on the
shorlist.
“To be recognised early in one’s career is
an incredible boost, and I am excited to see what new
opportunities will open up for Kirsti as a result of this
marvellous achievement,” Catton says. “We are all very
proud of her!”
Robert Sullivan, in whose workshop Kirsti
developed and honed her poems, is equally
impressed.
“Kirsti’s poetic voice leads her readers
to an emotional place,” says Sullivan. “She has a range
beyond her years from spoken word to lyrical poems for the
page. Her voice is an exciting addition to New Zealand
literature. She is also a very generous supporter of other
writers in the workshop. It’s a wonderful group.”
The
pride goes both ways: Kirsti takes inspiration from her
mentors, too.
“I look at all that Ellie has achieved,
and look to many of my favourite writers, and try not to
discount myself from the potential of the same kind of
success,” she says. “I know that earning potential as a
poet is not exceptional, in any way. But there is a small,
idealistic part of me that believes that if I work hard
enough, and have enough lucky breaks, maybe there is a way I
can make it work.”
Manukau Institute of Technology’s
creative writing programme, offering a bachelor’s degree
in creative writing and following the workshop model
pioneered by the University of Iowa, is unique in the
Auckland region.
Dean of Creative Arts, Grant Thompson
says the Creative Writing programme is world-class.
“Eleanor Catton is a key member of the teaching team and
has made an inspirational impact on the students. I believe
Kirsti’s name on the shortlist with Stead’s and
Neale’s was no accident, it’s testament to the success
of the programme. Time in the Faculty has enriched the
quality of her voice—she is a new talent receiving
recognition in advance of reputation.”
Kirsti isn’t the first of MIT’s creative writing students to be recognised. Daren Kamali, who will be capped this week, was awarded the Fulbright-Creative New Zealand Pacific Writer’s residency in Hawai'i in 2012 which was worth $30,000, and is currently reading at the Hawaii Books and Music Festival in Honolulu where his second book, Squid Out of Water, is being launched. His third book will be published in Australia later this year.
Ends