Read Huia Short Stories 10 Online
Authors: Tihema Baker
The Authors
Huia Short Stories 10
Hana Aranga
Hana Aranga (NgÄi TÅ«hoe, NgÄti Manawa, NgÄpuhi) teaches te reo MÄori at NgÄ Puna o Waiorea â Western Springs College, Auckland. Hana's pursuit of excellence drives her passion for teaching te reo MÄori. She also has a strong involvement in MÄori performing arts. She says that, although it is challenging at times, using writing to tell untold stories from unheard voices is one of the most stimulating and rewarding passions that she has.
Tihema Baker
NgÄti Raukawa ki te Tonga, Te Äti Awa ki Whakarongotai, NgÄti Toa Rangatira
NÅ Åtaki ahau. I ahau e tipu ake ana, ka whakatÅkia te painga o te mahi tuhituhi ki taku ngÄkau â te tuhinga poto me te pakimaero hoki. E noho ana au ki Te Whanganui-Ä-Tara, Ä, kua ako au i te reo MÄori ki konei mÅ te tohu BA ki Te Whare WÄnanga o te Upoko o te Ika a MÄui. Kua mutu taua mahi inÄianei, engari kÄtahi tonu taku haerenga ka tÄ«mata i roto o tÄnei ao nui.
TJ Corrigan
TJ Corrigan (Upokorehe hapÅ«, WhakatÅhea iwi) drew on a chance encounter and the kindness of a stranger in writing âHemi's Gift'. TJ currently lives in Wellington with her husband and their two dogs. She studied English and creative writing at Massey University, where she earned her bachelor of arts, and plans to go on to study at masters level. She has always loved reading, writing and listening to other people's stories, and is grateful for the opportunity to add her voice to the mix.
Shelly Davies
Shelly Davies (NgÄti Wai, NgÄti Porou) teaches business, technical and creative writing through Waiora Design Ltd. She loves plain language and transforming attitudes to writing. She's kept busy by her three tamariki and her hapÅ« NgÄti Rehua on Aotea, Great Barrier Island. She was a winner of the Auckland University of Technology Creative Writing competition in 2011 with her short story âLeap'.
Kirsty Dunn
Kirsty Dunn is currently completing her master's thesis in English at the University of Canterbury. âSam' was written as part of a larger collection of stories told through various voices spanning five generations of the same whÄnau; time spent at Kirsty's ancestral lands in Pawarenga inspired the project. Kirsty also writes poetry â some of which has been published in
Blackmail Press
, in
Potroast
and on one of Christchurch's inner city walls as part of
Poetica
â the city's urban poetry project. She is working on a new set of stories exploring the notion of the artist, while the novel inside her bides its time.
Philip Evans
Philip Evans (NgÄti Mutunga, NgÄi Tahu) was born in 1971 and grew up with ambitions of being the next H G Wells. Sadly, these have yet to be realised. He lives in Wellington with his wife, three children and one eccentric cat.
Ann French
Ann French (NgÄ Puhi) lives in Tauranga with her husband and best friend of forty-nine years, Chris. Her home is by the sea, where she has lived for most of her life. With five grandchildren who keep her young, she considers the small pleasures in life bring the greatest rewards. She paints silk as a hobby, but writing is the great passion in her life.
Petera Hakiwai
I whanau mai ahau i te 12 o ngÄ ra o Huitanguru i te tau 1992. Ka kÅhangatia au e aku matua ki Te whare kÅhungahunga o Ahumairangi, Ä ka kuraina au ki te kura o Otari. Ka 12 tau taku pakeke ka auraki atu au ki Te KÄreti o Te Aute ki reira ako ai mÅ ngÄ tau e rima. I Änei ra kua tata tutuki i a au taku tohu paetahi i Te whare wÄnanga o WikitÅria. Waihoki nÅ ngÄ tau e toru kua hipa ake nei kua noho au hei kaiwhakapÄho reo MÄori mÅ te reo irirangi o Te Upoko o Te Ika. I te tau 2011 nÅku te whiwhi ka pÅhiritia au e Te Panekiretanga o Te Reo me te aha, katahi anÅ te ihu ka puta. Ko te reo MÄori taku tino, Ä, ko te tÅ«manako ia ka whai wÄhi ahau hei roto i ngÄ tau ki te hoki atu ki Åku marae ki reira whakaako ai i te reo MÄori ki Åku whanaunga.
Eru Hart
Eru Hart (NgÄti Kahungunu, PÄkehÄ) is a thirty-three-year-old Wellington writer. He is currently working on a breakthrough folio of short pieces, provisionally titled
Splendid
. What exactly he breaks through, or indeed into, remains to be seen.
Kelly Joseph
Kelly Joseph is a writer and artist currently living on the Kapiti Coast with her family. She has previously had stories published in
Huia Short Stories 5
,
7
and
8
, and in
Hue and Cry
,
TakahÄ
and
JAAM
. Her story in this collection is dedicated to her dad, who was a great storyteller, and who inspired Kelly with his tales of the old King Country.
Shilo Kino
Shilo Kino (NgÄ Puhi, Tainui) of Te Atatu South, Auckland is a twenty-three year old Auckland University of Technology student halfway through a graduate diploma in Pacific Journalism. She already holds a Bachelor of Arts in English and Film, Television and Media from Auckland University. Shilo loves writing about the MÄori culture because she sees it as beautiful, unique and â more importantly â magical. While she grew up on prominent authors such as Witi Ihimaera and Patricia Grace, she believes that New Zealand literature is still missing out on magnificent MÄori tales. Shilo believes MÄori writers have stories to tell that should make all New Zealanders proud, and the rest of the world open their ears and listen. That is what she aspires to do.
Anahera Korohina-Bowen
Anahera Korohina-Bowen is of NgÄti Porou descent, in particular, Te WhÄnau-a-Hunaara of Horoera and Te WhÄnau-a-Hinerupe of Te Araroa; however, the Korohina whÄnau originated from Kiekie, Waipiro Bay. She is mother to four boys and nanny to one darling mokopuna, Mareikura.
She has taught English and history for twenty years at Te Kura Kaupapa MÄori o Ruamata. Prior to that she coordinated the pre-service teacher training programme Te Kura Pouako in Rotorua, was a reporter for
Te Karere
and a language teacher. Her passions include the revitalisation of the MÄori language, tikanga, waiata and culture, travelling, reading and spending quality time with her family and friends. The story in this collection is based on a childhood memory of life on the coast with her grandparents, pÄpÄ Mohi Turei Te Okeroa Korohina and nanny Waitemata Reretima Korohina (nee Paringatai).
Arihia Latham
Arihia Latham (NgÄi Tahu) is often found writing poems and story ideas on the back of bills and receipts. This is because, along with writing, she juggles the varied roles of lecturing, facilitating, health consulting and parenting in Wellington. She has found that bills and receipts are much more palatable when accompanied by a poem. She has had work published previously by Huia, and is currently working on a novel for young adults.
Robert MacDonald
Robert MacDonald (RangitÄne ki Wairau, Kahungunu ki Heretaunga) has lived in WaimÄrama for most of his sixty-four years. He thought he was too old, but after some encouragement from good friends, took a chance and entered the Pikihuia Awards.
Jacquie McRae
Jacquie McRae (Tainui) lives in Te Ärai with her husband. She loves her boys, books, yoga and the sea. She was a finalist for the Pikihuia Awards in 2009 and a participant in the Te Papa Tupu programme in 2010, and launched her first novel,
The Scent of Apples
, at the Pikihuia Awards in 2011. The novel won gold for fiction in the Independent Publisher Book Awards in New York in 2012.
Zeb Tamihana Nicklin
PÄhauwera, TÄmanuhiri ngÄ iwi. Ka tipu ake ahau ko te reo PÄkehÄ taku reo kÅrero ao te pÅ, pÅ te ao, ka mutu, he reo PÄkehÄ noa iho kei te arero o Åku mÄtua. Kia tae rÄnÅ ahau ki te kura tuarua kÄtahi ka tÅ«taki mÄua ko Reo, Ä, ka moea. I whakapÅtaetia ahau i Te Kupenga o te MÄtauranga hai kaiako Kura Kaupapa MÄori. Ko te reo MÄori hai kai ki taku wairua!
Toni Pivac
Toni Pivac (NgÄti WhÄtua, Te Rarawa, NgÄpuhi) is twenty-six years old, and lives in her home town of WhangÄrei with her family. Stories (both reading and writing) have always been a passion of hers, since her dad introduced her to books as a young child. She holds a bachelor of communication studies, but has always preferred the fantastical world of fiction. For some strange reason, her ideas for stories always seem to coincide with the very edge of sleep. Toni squeezes in writing whenever she can while being mÄmÄ to her two beautiful tamariki. She loves Mila and Matija, has a huge weakness for fries, banoffee pie, watermelon and puppies, and dreams of one day being a fully fledged author.
Frazer Rangihuna
Frazer Rangihuna (NgÄti Porou) is from Te TairÄwhiti (Gisborne), and currently lives in Auckland. In 1992 his fifth-form English teacher told him he was a talented writer, but writing an essay about
Othello
in his bursary English exam was where his literary jaunt ended at that time. In 2010, he succumbed again. He has no formal writing qualifications â just huge enthusiasm, a craving to learn and a tendency to go off on tangents. He is currently working on his first novel. In between, he is a nurse working in acute mental health, and at home an affable hermit.
Terence Rissetto
Terence Rissetto (NgÄti PÄoa, NgÄi Tahu, NgÄti MÄmoe, Waitaha) is a double graduate of the University of Auckland. He has previously been published in
Landfall
,
Huia Short Stories 9
and online magazines including
Blackmail Press
,
Penduline
and
Bold Monkey
. He says, âI am a ventriloquist breathing life and dark into the mouths of the unliving. At night I pack my dummies into the suitcase of my mind: sometimes with an arm sticking out, sometimes a leg. Life is not always as tidy. Often I hear voices from within but my lips are not moving. Maybe I'm dreaming.' Terence has spent time in Europe, and currently lives in South Auckland.
Horiana Robin
Horiana Robin (NgÄti Kahungunu, TÅ«wharetoa, Rongowhakaata, NgÄti Porou, NgÄti Raukawa) lives in Hastings on an apple orchard that her parents bought. She attributes many blessings in her life to Te Atua, but the greatest blessing is her son Ihakara. Horiana's grandmother introduced her to her love of words at a very early age. She couldn't understand why her grandmother always had her nose in a book, and would get very jealous of her inattention to her. Lo and behold, Horiana has had her nose buried in a book ever since. She has been writing maniacally for the last eight years, much to the patient annoyance of her family and friends.
Marama Salsano
Marama Salsano is a Gisborne writer who lives and works in Taranaki. She has a penchant for Italian pastiera cake, and cannot fully function without her morning soy mochaccino.
Rongomai Smith
Ko Rongomai Smith tÅku ingoa. He uri tÄnei nÅ Taranaki me NgÄi Tahu. Kua tata ake nei au ki te otinga o taku tohu paetahi i te whare wÄnanga o WikitÅria i roto i te reo Maori, me te mÄtauranga MÄori. Kia oti taku tohu paetahi ka hoki atu au ki TÅ«ranga whai mahi ai i roto i te ao o ngÄ kaiako i ngÄ kura tuarua. Kua ako au i te reo MÄori mÅ ngÄ tau e toru inÄianei i te whare wÄnanga. Ko te manako, ka haere tonu tÄnei huarahi ki te whai, ki te whakatutuki anÅ hoki i ngÄ wawata o rÄtou mÄ, kia piki ake te huia kÅrero o tÄtou katoa, kia kore ai tÅ tÄtou reo kÄmehameha e noho ana ki te pari o te rua e maimoatia ai. Heoi, nei rÄ aku mihi manahau ki a tÄtou katoa.
Aimee Stephens
Aimee Stephens has been married to her husband, David Tapping, for nearly two years, and is currently teaching Te Reo MÄori and English in a secondary school setting. She is of Kai Tahu descent; her hapÅ« is KÄti Huirapa ki Puketeraki. Her family is her treasure. She hopes to continue sharing kÅrero that explore the unique relationship between MÄori and Te Taiao, and will continue to pursue a career in writing.
Mark Sweet
Mark Sweet was born in Napier. He worked overseas, in Hong Kong and Scotland, before returning to Hawke's Bay and establishing the Pacifica restaurant. Recreating himself as a writer, Mark was selected for the Te Papa Tupu programme in 2010, where he developed the novel
Zhu Mao
, published in 2011. He was a finalist in the Pikihuia competition the same year, submitting a short story and a novel extract. Mark is working on his next novel,
Of Good and Evil
, and is a feature writer for
Baybuzz
magazine.
Erin Thompson-Pou
Erin Thompson-Pou was born and raised in Rotorua. She married a local boy, and they continue to live in Rotorua with their three tamÄhine. Erin finds that storytelling is a great way to share, inspire and encourage. Her most recent selection of stories was written to inspire whÄnau training towards IronMÄori and on the road to improved health and well-being. Although Erin juggles a busy life, with whÄnau, mahi, business and iwi commitments, she hopes to compile a selection of iwi-based stories in both te reo MÄori and English in the future, for her whÄnau to enjoy.
Karuna Thurlow
He uri nÅ te whÄnau Nihoniho (KÄi Tahu, NgÄti Porou), i tipu ake a Karuna ki te ata o KÄ Tiritiri o te Moana ki te rohe o Waitaha. Tokorua Ähana kera e haere ana ki te kura tuatahi. Ko tÅhona moehewa kia ara ake anÅ te reo MÄori hai reo matua mÅ Åhona whÄnau, hapÅ«, iwi.
Aaron Ure
Aaron Ure, of Taranaki iwi descent and raised across New Zealand, is the husband of one and father of four. He is a late bloomer when it comes to reading and story-writing. Starting his training at the Waiariki Institute of Technology at forty-nine, Aaron found he had a unique voice and diverse stories to tell. Aaron finds that writing brings harmony and expression to both his MÄori and his European heritage.
Helen Waaka
Two years ago, after winning the Pikihuia short story award, Helen Waaka wanted to give up her day job and write full-time. Since then, she has completed Whitireia's graduate diploma in creative writing, but hasn't given up the day job ⦠not quite yet. The writing is slowly taking over most aspects of her life, though. She thanks her whÄnau for being so understanding.
Tangai Waranga
Tangai Waranga (NgÄti Porou/NgÄti Kahungunu) studies creative writing at the Manukau Technical Institute. She is a member of Banana Boat (a MÄori and Pasifika writers' collective), has danced hula at the Pasifika Festival and is a past pupil of Tangaroa College, Otara.