Stephanie Johnson (author)
Stephanie Johnson MNZM |
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File:Stephanie Johnson MNZM (cropped).jpg
Johnson in 2019
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Born | 1961 (age 63–64) Auckland, New Zealand |
Occupation | Author |
Language | English |
Nationality | New Zealander |
Notable works | The Shag Incident |
Notable awards | Deutz Medal for Fiction |
Stephanie Patricia Johnson MNZM (born 1961) is a poet, playwright, and short story writer from New Zealand. She lives in Auckland with her husband, film editor Tim Woodhouse, although she lived in Australia for much of her twenties.[1] Many of her books have been published there, and her non-fiction book West Island, about New Zealanders in Australia, is partly autobiographical.[1]
Contents
Background
Johnson was born in Auckland in 1961.[2]
Career
Johnson has taught creative writing at the University of Auckland, the University of Waikato, Auckland University of Technology and Massey University.[3] She co-founded the Auckland Writers' Festival with Peter Wells, and served as creative director and trustee.[3][4][5]
Published works
Johnson has published novels, poetry, plays, and collections of short stories.
Novels and short stories
- The Glass Whittler (1989, New Women's Press), short stories
- Crimes of Neglect (1992, New Women's Press), novel
- All the Tenderness Left in the World (1993, Otago University Press), short stories
- The Heart’s Wild Surf (1996, Random House), novel
- The Whistler (1998, Vintage, Random House), novel
- Belief (2000, Vintage, Random House), novel
- The Shag Incident (2002, Vintage, Random House), novel
- Music From A Distant Room (2004, Vintage, Random House)
- Drowned Sprat and Other Stories (2005, Vintage, Random House), short stories
- John Tomb's Head (2006, Vintage, Random House), novel
- Swimmers' Rope (2008, Vintage, Random House) novel
- The Open World (2012, Vintage, Random House), novel
- The Writing Class (2013, Vintage, Random House), novel
- The Writers’ Festival (2015, Vintage, Random House), novel
- Playing for Both Sides (2016, Bridget Williams Books), creative non-fiction
- West Island: Five Twentieth-century New Zealanders in Australia (2019, Otago University Press), creative non-fiction
- Everything Changes (2021, Penguin Random House), novel
Plays and radio dramas
- Accidental Phantasies (1985), stage play
- Castle In the Harbour (1987), radio drama
- Folie à Deux (1995, with Stuart Hoar), stage play
- Hard Hitting Documentary (1995), radio drama
- Sparrow’s Pearls (1996), radio drama
- Trout (1996), radio drama
Poetry
- The Bleeding Ballerina (1987, Hard Echo Press), poetry
- Moody Bitch (2003, Godwit), poetry
Honours and awards
In 1985, Johnson won the Bruce Mason Playwriting Award.[6]
In the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, The Whistler, was shortlisted for the fiction award in 1999[4] and Belief was shortlisted in 2001.[2]
The Shag Incident was awarded the Deutz Medal for Fiction at the 2003 Montana New Zealand Book Awards.[7]
Johnson also won the 1996 Dymocks/Quote Unquote Reader's Poll, Best New Zealand Book for The Heart’s Wild Surf and Crimes of Neglect, was shortlisted for the 1993 Wattie Book Awards.[8]
Music From a Distant Room (in 2006) and John Tomb's Head (in 2008) were nominated for International Dublin Literary Award.[9][10]
In the 2019 Queen's Birthday Honours, Johnson was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature.[11]
In 2022, she received the Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in Fiction.[12]
Fellowships and residencies
Johnson received the 2000 New Zealand Post Katherine Mansfield Prize, allowing her to travel to Menton, France.[4] She received the University of Auckland Literary Fellowship in 2001.[2] In 2016 she was selected as the Randell Cottage Writer in Residence.[3][13]
References
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- Pages with reference errors
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- Living people
- 1961 births
- New Zealand fiction writers
- New Zealand women novelists
- New Zealand women short story writers
- Members of the New Zealand Order of Merit
- New Zealand emigrants to Australia
- University of Auckland faculty
- University of Waikato faculty
- Writers from Auckland