Weekend Herald

Turning over a new leaf

The founders of children’s publishing firm OneTree House talk to Dionne Christian

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Christine Dale stood in her Ellerslie home, phone clutched in one hand, hastily opening a parcel she and business partner Jenny Nagle were eagerly awaiting. “They’re here!” Dale told Nagle, who was on the other end of the phone at the New Zealand Society of Authors (PEN NZ) where she is the CEO. Then Dale paused, giving Nagle slight cause for concern.

“Well, what do they look like?” Nagle asked, her eagerness beginning to waver on anxious.

“They’re just great!” Dale declared, having taken a moment to collect herself.

“They” are the first four releases from Nagle and Dale’s new independen­t publishing company, OneTree House. It will put out 43 titles for children and young adults this year: picture, junior fiction and YA books; bilingual editions — for babies, early language learning and educationa­l resources to reflect NZ’s growing multicultu­ralism — and Te Reo Maori titles.

Dale, who has been illustrati­ng books since the 1980s and was once publishing manager at Scholastic NZ, and Nagle, with 30 years’ experience in educationa­l publishing and an former owner of a successful publishing company, have long lamented the decline in local children’s book publishing. They’d heard from seasoned and successful NZ authors who couldn’t get manuscript­s — very fine ones — published; through work with schools, they knew of the unmet demand for bilingual children’s books.

So, last year, on April 2 (World Children’s Books Day and the anniversar­y of Hans Christian Andersen’s birth), they started OneTree House aiming to publish books by establishe­d NZ authors — a mix of new titles as well as reprints of much-loved stories where the rights had reverted to their writers.

Dale points out, though, that the seed of the idea was sewn for her while judging a children’s book competitio­n. She came across a manuscript that didn’t win, and might not have been published, but decided it was so good, she’d ask the author whether she could publish it.

“I told Jenny and she could see how excited I was; the next time we saw each other, she said, ‘I want to start a publishing company with you’.”

Dale had recently become Chair of the Storylines Management Committee (Storylines promotes the developmen­t of children’s and teen’s literature in NZ) while Nagle, also on the committee, was soon to become CEO of PEN NZ.

For readers, the new venture will mean greater choice — and stories that are of and from New Zealand — by authors such as Brian Falkner, Kyle Mewburn, Mandy Hager, Ngaere Roberts and Pamela Allen. For the local literary economy, it could mean a slight boost given that they intend to print their books in NZ.

Several of the books contain additional informatio­n, applicable to the stories they tell. Tina Shaw’s Make a Hard Fist, a psychologi­cal thriller, features self-defence techniques which were included after consulting with Rape Crisis organisati­ons; there’s also a list of links to relevant organisati­ons. Cuz, by Liz van der Laarse, includes tips on bush survival, a glossary of terms, and maps of the region the characters find themselves in.

The first four books (see sidebar) went on sale this week but already the fledgling company is attracting global attention. Dale and Nagle learned last week they’ve been nominated for Best Children’s Publisher of the Year at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair.

Now in its sixth year, the prize acknowledg­es publishers in six areas of the world: Africa, Central and South America, North America, Asia, Europe and Oceania. OneTree House, Oratia Press and three publishers from Australia are in the running for the Oceania

Junior fiction

OneTree House puts out two new YA and two new junior fiction books this month; all available at $20 each.

Wedlock by Denis Wright: Lucy Sorrenson is the only grown-up at her place, in her opinion. Her father acts like a teenage muso; her grandad’s grasp on reality is slipping away and she’s sick of the responsibi­lity of looking after them. She wants to be in the school play, go to cast parties, and have fun with her friends. But on opening night she is called to the stage door. No one would believe the role she now has to play when she is abducted by a cult.

Make a Hard Fist by Tina Shaw: “Lizzie Q why so blue?” Lizzie Quinn receives an anonymous letter in the mail. Then she is attacked. She goes back to school scared of her own shadow. A teacher she trusts finds her a coach for a self-defence class. But the letters keep coming — and she knows the threat is still very real.

prize; the inaugural prize, in 2013, was won by Wellington’s Gecko Press.

While Dale and Nagle can’t afford to travel to Italy for the event, they intend to use the publicity as a springboar­d to internatio­nal agents and publishers, important contacts for OneTree House.

Nagle recalls being at an East Auckland school Sticking with Pigs by Mary-anne Scott: Uncle Jeremy has been helping the family out for a while now, by dropping off meat he’s shot. An offer to go hunting sounds great to14-yearold Wolf … a chance to get away from the family stress. But this hunting trip proves to be more than he bargained for. Cuz by Liz van der Laarse: River is offered the chance to crew on his uncle’s trawler — a coastal trip to get a new engine. He finds his cousin, Huia, annoying — she’s all about Maoritanga while he can’t even speak the language. When an accident leaves the two cousins stranded together on the coast of Fiordland, they must work together to save themselves.

The last two March releases are Te Reo picture books by Dale and Ngaere Roberts. Ko Kiwi Ma focuses on language learning and maths using NZ fauna; Te Whare is a companion book with simple te reo phrases and vocabulary moving through a New Zealand home.

 ?? Picture / Geoff Dale ?? OneTree House’s Jenny Nagle (left) and Christine Dale.
Picture / Geoff Dale OneTree House’s Jenny Nagle (left) and Christine Dale.
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