
Landfall 237
Edited by Emma Neale
- Results and winning essay from the Charles Brasch Young Writers’ Essay Competition 2019
- Exciting contemporary art and writing
Featured artists
Sharon Singer, Ngahuia Harrison, Peter Trevelyan
Awards and competitions
Results and winning essays from the 2019 Charles Brasch Young Writers’ Essay Competition, and judge’s report by Emma Neale.
Writers
John Adams, Peter Bland, Laura Borrowdale, Bill Bradford, Iain Britton, Medb Charleton, Stephen Coates, Carolyn DeCarlo, John Dennison, Lynley Edmeades, David Eggleton, Joan Fleming, Jasmine Gallagher, John Gallas, Brett Gartrell, John Geraets, Tim Grgec, Michael Hall, Rebecca Hawkes, Joy Holley, Aaron Horrell, Gail Ingram, Claudia Jardine, Sam Keenan, Erik Kennedy, Arihia Latham, Jessica Le Bas, Wes Lee, Tina Makereti, Ria Masae, Cilla McQueen, Zoë Meager, Robynanne Milford, Sean Monaghan, Art Nahill, Kavita Nandan, Rachel O’Neill, Maris O’Rourke, Claire Orchard, Joanna Preston, essa may ranapiri, Anna Rankin, Jeremy Roberts, Leanne Radojkovich, Carrie Rudzinski, Kerrin P. Sharpe, Sarah Shirley, Rachel Smith, Elizabeth Smither, Catherine Trundle, Kirsteen Ure, Tam Vosper, Tom Weston, Anna Woods, Kirby Wright
Reviews
Landfall Review Online: books recently reviewed
John Dennison on Collected Poems by Allen Curnow, eds Elizabeth Caffin and Terry Sturm
Michael Hulse on Allen Curnow by Terry Sturm, ed. Linda Cassells
Tracey Slaughter on Caroline’s Bikini by Kirsty Gunn
Philip Temple on Charles Brasch Journals 1958–1973, ed. Peter Simpson
Lynley Edmeades on louder, by Kerrin P. Sharpe; Enclosures 4 by Bill Direen; and Luxembourg by Stephen Oliver
Arihia Latham on Tāngata Ngāi Tahu /People of Ngāi Tahu (Vol. 1), eds Helen Brown and Takerai Norton
Published with the assistance of Creative New Zealand
Reviews and Interviews
Like unwrapping presents on Christmas Day, opening Landfall 237 reveals a wealth of artistic delight. – Kathy Watson, Booksellers NZ
The reading experience is kaleidoscopic, pulling you in different directions, towards both lightness and darkness, risk and comfort. – Poetry Shelf