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Kawana, Phil
Writer's File

Phil Kawana

Wellington - Te Whanganui-a-Tara
Kawana, Phil
In brief
Phil Kawana (Ngāruahine, Ngāti Ruanui, Ngāti Kahungunu) is a short story writer, poet and performer. Before Kawana published his first collection of short stories, Dead Jazz Guys (1999), he had twice won the Te Kaunihera Māori Award for best short story in English by a previously published Māori writer in the Huia Short Story Awards. His writing has been anthologised and Kawana has appeared in a number of literary festivals and events, in schools, and on radio and television. Kawana's first poetry collection, The Devil in My Shoes, was published in 2005.
Bio

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kawana, Phil (1965 - ) is a short story writer and poet whose work often follows the lives of young Māori characters drifting between urban and rural New Zealand.

Of Ngaruahine, Ngati Ruanui and Ngati Kahungunu descent, Kawana was born and raised in Taranaki. At the age of seven he realised that a recently deceased friend of the family, 'Uncle Ron', was author Ronald Hugh Morrieson, and discovered 'that real people can write books.'

Kawana's poetry had appeared in Kapiti Poems and a short story had appeared in Sport before he won the Te Kaunihera Maori Award for best short story in English by a previously published Māori writer in the inaugural Huia Short Story Awards (Pukihuia Awards) in 1995. He won the category again in 1997.

Dead Jazz Guys (1999) is Kawana's first collection of short stories. Gordon McLauchlan writes in the New Zealand Herald, 'What stamps him as modern... is not the affected brashness, nor the show-off verbal pyrotechnics of so many of his Pākehā contemporaries, but a cool unsentimental eye, an affection for his Māoriness but an ability to stand back and appraise it, to understand it.'

Phil Kawana has appeared at numerous literary festivals and events, in schools, and on radio and television profiles. Many of his stories have been broadcast on National Radio.

In 1999 Kawana published a collection of short stories and poetry, Attack of the Skunk People.

A small selection of Phil Kawana's poems appeared in the prizewinning Whetu Moana: Contemporary Polynesian Poems in English, edited by Albert Wendt, Reina Whaitiri and Robert Sullivan, (Auckland University Press, 2003).

Kawana's first poetry collection, The Devil in My Shoes, was published by Auckland University Press in 2005.

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