Keri Hulme
Australian Literature
New Zealand
novelist, poet, and short-story writer, best known for her first novel, The Bone People (1983). The work won the
Booker Prize, the United Kingdom's most prestigious literary award, in 1985, as
well as New Zealand's Pegasus Prize for Maori Literature, in 1984.Hulme, of
English, Scottish, and Maori (the original peoples of New Zealand) ancestry,
was born in Christchurch and educated at Canterbury University. She later
worked as a tobacco picker, pharmacist's assistant, and postwoman. Her first
published work was a poetry collection entitled The Silence Between: Moeraki Conversations (1982). Hulme has
developed a writing style and vocabulary that are distinctly of New Zealand,
even though they draw on the traditions of English, Irish, and American
Literature. Her writing is often reliant on dream imagery and myth. Her other
works include the novella Lost Possessions
(1985), the short-story collection The
Windeater/Te Kaihau (1986), and a second collection of poetry, Shards (1992).
No comments:
Post a Comment