Airini Beautris: Ockham s winner on Bug Week, back-stabbing, motherhood and pole dancing
14 May, 2021 08:00 PM
9 minutes to read
Whanganui writer Airini Beautrais has won the coveted fiction prize at the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards with a provocative collection of short stories. Photo / Marcel Tromp
Whanganui writer Airini Beautrais has won the coveted fiction prize at the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards with a provocative collection of short stories. Photo / Marcel Tromp
By: Joanna Mathers
Airini Beautrais, this year s Jann Medlicott Acorn for Fiction winner at the 2021 Ockham awards, talks with Joanna Mathers about stepping into the limelight. They are waiting. The women are waiting. Down the lushly carpeted
New Zealand film-maker Sharron Ward on the trauma of being imprisoned in Libya
8 Jan, 2021 07:00 PM
11 minutes to read
By: Joanna Mathers
Joanna Mathers talks with award-winning New Zealand documentary film-maker Sharron Ward about coming home . Isolation had the sting of familiarity. Confinement, enforced meal times, dull, aching hunger. Small aftershocks of Libya but without the lurking malevolence.
Returning to New Zealand (and two weeks isolation) from decades living in London, Kiwi film-maker Sharron Ward felt the echo of another confinement. In 2012 she was held for three days by anti-Gaddafi forces controlling Tripoli, after filming at an ex-military base-turned-IDP (internally displaced persons) camp.