Otago Daily Times

Prizewinni­ng horror writer picks up first NZ award

-

WELLINGTON: Lee Murray is the winner of this year’s New Zealand Society of Authors Cuba Press Laura Solomon Prize.

She won for a manuscript reimaginin­g reallife narratives from the Chinese women’s diaspora in New Zealand.

Murray has won nine internatio­nal awards for her writing, including four prestigiou­s Bram Stokers. But she said winning a New Zealand prize was still very special, especially as it was the first time she had been published by a local publisher.

‘‘It does feel momentous to be suddenly visible at home,’’ Murray said.

The winning manuscript, Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud, is a series of interconne­cted narrative poems, linked through the classic mythology of the Chinese shapeshift­ing nine-tailed fox spirit as it seeks to ascend to its true form in the celestial skies.

Murray’s manuscript was selected by a panel consisting of Mary McCallum and Sarah Bolland (The Cuba Press), Nicky Solomon (Solomon family) and panel convener and awardwinni­ng author Tina Shaw.

‘‘Fox Spirit on a Distant Cloud acts on a mythical level that also tells stories of socalled ‘ordinary’ women that we don’t usually hear about,’’ Shaw said.

Murray’s winning manuscript will be published by The Cuba Press later this year. Publisher Ms McCallum said Murray’s manuscript was an audacious combinatio­n of historical reality and mythology, poetic lyricism and political activism.

‘‘She is telling stories that have waited a long time to be told and we are happy to be a part of making that happen,’’ Ms McCallum said.

Murray said it was really hard to be a writer in New Zealand, but the country’s stories were becoming more sought after on the world stage.

 ?? ?? Lee Murray
Lee Murray

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand