We put all our books in one kete.
Kete gathers reviews and news about books, authors, events and awards in Aotearoa. Kete forages weekly selecting books for you.
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Reviews · Ngā Arotake
Author: Michael Bennett Reviewer: Greg Fleming
Two murders. Two decades apart. One chance to get justice. Hana Westerman has left Auckland and her career as a detective behind her. Settled in a quiet coastal town, all she wants is a fresh start…
April 2024 release
Author: Pippa Latour with Jude Dobson Publisher: Allen and Unwin
This is the astounding true story of one of the last female special operations agents in France to get out alive after its liberation in WWII.
Born in 1921, Pippa Latour became a covert special operations agent who parachuted into a field in Nazi-occupied Normandy.
Released: 23 April 2024
Author: Ngāhuia te Awekōtuku Publisher: HarperCollins New Zealand
‘In the 1950s, a young Ngahuia is fostered by a family who believe in hard work and community. Although close to her kuia, she craves more: she wants higher education and refined living. But whanau dismiss her dreams. To them, she is just a show-off, always getting into trouble, talking back and running away…’
Released: 17 April
Author: Susan Devoy Reviewer: Chris Long
“Over my lifetime I have given most things a crack when presented with the opportunity,” Susan Devoy writes in her funny and fascinating new biography, Dame Suzy D: My Story.
From self-described ‘working-class girl’ to Dame, Race Relations Commissioner to reality TV star, unbeatable squash world number one to all-too-relatable mother of four…
April 2024 release
Editors: Catherine Hammond, Shaun Higgins Reviewer: David Veart
In 1848, two decades after a French inventor mixed daylight with a cocktail of chemicals to fix the view outside his window onto a metal plate, photography arrived in Aotearoa. How did these 'portraits in a machine' reveal Maori and Pakeha to themselves and to each other? Were the first photographs 'a good likeness' or were they tricksters? What stories do they capture of the changing landscape of Aotearoa?
April 2024 release
Editors: David Eggleton, Vaughan Rapatahana, Mere Taito Reviewer: Elizabeth Heritage
‘Katūīvei: Contemporary Pasifika Poetry from Aotearoa New Zealand is the latest in a decades-long line of anthologies of Pasifika poetry written in English. The title is a neologism created by editors David Eggleton, Vaughan Rapatahana and Mere Taito, referencing the Rotuman verb to navigate and the tūī, bird of two voiceboxes.’
April 2024 release
Author: Louise Wallace Reviewer: Anna Scaife
‘Ash is a bruising portrait of what boils in the belly of a woman who is “coping”, revealed with humour and a rare candour.’
April 2024 release
Author: Peter Simpson Reviewer: Graham Hill
‘This substantial book of letters selected by esteemed Colin McCahon scholar Peter Simpson shines a light on one of the most remarkable relationships in New Zealand art. The painter Colin McCahon and the librarian Ron O'Reilly first met in 1938, in Dunedin, when McCahon was 19 and O'Reilly 24. They remained close, writing regularly to each other until 1981…’
April 2024 release
Author: Madeleine and Rosie Redding Publisher: Mary Egan Publishing
‘Rosie is a shy young teenager when she starts experimenting with alcohol. When Rosie's parents finally realise that their beloved daughter is having problems with her drinking, Rosie is firmly in the grip of alcoholism…’
Released: 11 March
Author: Judy Bailey Reviewer: Catherine Milford
'A deep dive into an area that affects all of us, if we’re lucky.' Catherine Milford reviews Evolving by journalist, news anchor, television presenter, and mother of the nation, Judy Bailey and finds solace in the book’s running thread ‘that getting older doesn’t have to mean becoming invisible.'
April 2024 release
Aotearoa Bestsellers — to 20 April 2024
Junior Fiction and YA Bestsellers — March
Local and lustrous – a small sample of the Auckland Writers Festival’s extensive homegrown line-up
Māori Books 2024 and Pasifika Books 2024
These two catalogues bring together an exciting range of recent and forthcoming Māori and Pasifika Books. They feature books by Māori and Pasifika writers, illustrators, editors and translators. Included too are bilingual children’s books in Pasifika languages, translated works in te reo Māori, some originally written by non-Māori authors, as well as books on Māori and Pasifika history, topics and themes including some by non-Māori or Pasifika writers.
Together they feature more than 90 books from 22 publishers.
View the catalogues:
Māori Books 2024
Pasifika Books 2024
What’s new? · He aha ngā mea hou?
The latest books, articles, and more.
Author: Dahlia Malaeulu Publisher: Mila Books
Alofa tele atu, sending all my love, conveys a Pasifika parent's dreams, hopes, and cultural wishes for their Pasifika child as they embark on life's journey. The book unfolds as a personal letter expressing deep love and pride, incorporating cultural wisdom and cherished traditions.
Author: David Riley Publisher: Reading Warrior
Tuli has come down from heaven to explore our planet. But all he finds everywhere is water. Tagaloa creates land for him, but now he's lonely and doesn't have anyone to share it with! Find out what happens next in The First Samoans, a bilingual Samoan legend retold by David Riley and illustrated by Rasela Lafaele Uili.
18 April 2024
Author: M.H. Green Publisher: M.H.Green
Fresh from her success in her first murder trial at the Old Bailey, Penelope Lloyd-Hargreaves is persuaded to represent a senior Queen's Council who is in grave danger of being disbarred. Having accepted the case, she must call upon every ounce of expertise to achieve a satisfactory result. But is it enough? Will she prevail? And what of the request to take on a pupil? How will this fit in with her ambition to take silk?
April 2024
Author: Angi Pearce Publisher: Angi Pearce
Henry Houdini is an adventurous little dog who likes to go exploring beyond the walls of his property. His owners decide they need to do something to stop his roaming ways, but will they be successful in stopping him from escaping and wandering the streets?
April 2024
Author: Peter Sergel Publisher: Phantom House Books
When the city of Hamilton decided to establish a park on its old city rubbish dump, there were initially no plans to make it different from any other public park. However,
through strong community support and sponsorship, a unique space has emerged that’s now being recognised as one of the great gardens of the world.
23 April 2024
Author: Schaeffer Lemalu Publisher: Compound Press
The debut collection from a great poet and artist gone too soon. His word is among us, travelling still, full of candour, humility, a loving regard for detail. Includes an introduction by renowned US poet Donald Revell.
28 April 2024
Author: Bob Calkin Publisher: Quentin Wilson Publishing
Tales from the Lucky Generation follows Bob's rise from humble roots in working-class Whanganui to the world of law and business before a spectacular fall from grace landed him with a six-year prison sentence. Imprisonment changed Bob from an ambitious go-getter to a thoughtful, socially conscious man intent on recovering his sense of self-worth by making a positive contribution to society.
Author: Kiri Piahana-Wong Publisher: Anahera Press
Tidelines interweaves the poet's own life with the tragic story of Hinerangi, who lived at Karekare in the distant past. These are poems of Auckland's west coast, reflecting the steady rhythms of daily existence, alongside grief, mental unwellness, disintegration and resolution.
23 April 2024
Author: Pippa Latour with Jude Dobson Publisher: Allen & Unwin
During her time in Normandy, Pippa sent 135 secret messages conveying crucial information on German troop positions in the lead-up to D-Day. Pippa continued her mission until the liberation of Paris in August 1944.
For decades, Pippa told no one - not even her family - of her incredible feats during WWII.
Now, for the first time, her story can be told in full.
Author: Miriam Sharland Publisher: Otago University Press
Heart Stood Still is a record of Sharland's journey towards finding healing in the world's natural beauty, a beauty that we must fight to protect in the current climate crisis. It is both a memoir and a lyrical portrait of Manawatu. Through a series of personal essays that follow the pattern of the seasons, Sharland skilfully weaves reflections on her life and family history with observations on the native and introduced plants and animals about her; all tinged with her experience as 'an unsettled settler' in Aotearoa.
Author: Ngahuia te Awekotuku Publisher: HarperCollins New Zealand
‘In the 1950s, a young Ngahuia is fostered by a family who believe in hard work and community. Although close to her kuia, she craves more: she wants higher education and refined living. But whanau dismiss her dreams. To them, she is just a show-off, always getting into trouble, talking back and running away…’
Author: Peter Langlands Publisher: Penguin Books
New Zealand is full of incredible, edible wild foods - fruit, fungi and seaweed; berries, herbs and more - you only need to know where to look and how to do it safely. Foraging New Zealand is the ultimate guide to unearthing more than 250 of our tastiest wild plants.
Editors: David Eggleton, Vaughan Rapatahana, and Mere Taito Publisher: Massey University Press
To write poetry in New Zealand as a Pacific migrant is an act of wayfinding, a creative process of discovery and negotiation between cultural spaces. This collection of 137 poems by 89 Aotearoa-based Pacific poets explores that navigation.Deep and rich, like Moana Oceania itself, it shows Pasifika poetry to be in a constant state of 'old and new', of haharagi and lelea' mafua, a lively and evolving continuum.
11 April 2024
Author: Peter Walker Publisher: Massey University Press
An eagle, and its place in our history. The legend of Pouakai, aka the extinct Haast's Eagle, takes Peter Walker on a journey from an 1860s Canterbury sheep run to a deep cave near Karamea as he learns the story of the mighty hunter that inhabited a peak in the foothills of the Southern Alps.
Editors: Catherine Hammond & Shaun Higgins Publisher: Auckland University Press
‘In 1848, two decades after a French inventor mixed daylight with a cocktail of chemicals to fix the view outside his window onto a metal plate, photography arrived in Aotearoa. How did these 'portraits in a machine' reveal Maori and Pakeha to themselves and to each other? Were the first photographs 'a good likeness' or were they tricksters? What stories do they capture of the changing landscape of Aotearoa?’
Author: Peter Simpson Publisher: Te Papa Press
‘The painter Colin McCahon and the librarian Ron O’Reilly first met in 1938, in Dunedin, when McCahon was 19 and O’Reilly 24. They remained close, writing regularly to each other until 1981, when McCahon became too unwell to write.
Their 380 letters covered McCahon’s art practice, the contemporary art scene, ideas, philosophy and the spiritual life. Dazzling in their range, intensity and candour, the letters track a unique friendship and partnership in art.’
11 April 2024
Author: Louise Wallace Publisher: Te Herenga Waka University Press
Thea lives under a mountain - one that's ready to blow. A vet at a mid-sized rural practice has been called back during maternity leave and is coping - just - with the juggle of meetings, mealtimes, farm visits, her boss's search for legal loopholes and the constant care of her much-loved children, Eli and Lucy. But something is shifting in Thea - something is burning. Or is it that she is becoming aware, for the first time, of the bright, hot core at her centre? Then comes an urgent call. Ingeniously layered, Ash is a story about reckoning with one's rage and finding marvels in the midst of chaos.
11 April 2024
Author: Susan Devoy Publisher: Allen & Unwin
In her own words - and in the hilarious, straight-up style that won her legions of new fans on Celebrity Treasure Island- Dame Susan tells the story of her life so far: the wins, the losses, the battles . . . and the bonds that got her through life's hardest challenges.
Author: Matthew Wright Publisher: Oratia Books
'Those Who Have the Courage will be a valuable resource for anyone who is interested in the military and social history of New Zealand. It is a comprehensive history of the Royal New Zealand Armoured Corps, the Mounted Rifles and predecessor units ...' - Governor-General Dame Cindy Kiro, from the Foreword.
Author: Judy Bailey Publisher: HarperCollins New Zealand
When beloved broadcaster Judy Bailey signed off her final news bulletin in 2005, she had no idea that the next years would be some of the most fulfilling of her life.
In Evolving Judy shares new science and personal stories that have shaped her own path into older age. She tackles subjects like taking care of your body and mind through to organising finances, navigating health scares, grieving loved ones and enjoying the finer things.
Author: Alice Taylor Publisher: Allen & Unwin
All the classics are included, plus ways to refresh them with a twist here and there.
Alice loves cake, and baking of any kind! She's spent years perfecting these recipes, and shares this essential collection so that you can enjoy them as much as she does.
Author: Steph Matuku Publisher: Huia Publishers
An amazing building rises on the edge of town - it's the dream factory. Every night, it sends out magical mist. Flying cars, flower cakes and talking tigers fill people's dreams. And the next day, the people make those dreams come true. But when a kereru flies into the dream factory, and a feather floats into a cog, everything goes terribly wrong.
Author: Anders Sparring Publisher: Gecko Press
Theo is good at most things. He can almost count to a thousand, knows several French words and can operate the washing machine. But he can't lie or steal.
"You must try harder," says his mother sternly.
1st April 2024
Author: Juliette MacIver Publisher: Scholastic New Zealand
The final book in this wonderful fantasy animal trilogy. Faelan the Fearless (Faelan the Wolf #3), Pack Leader Bardolph Lupus dies and his son Weylin is set to take the Stone. Faelan is fretting about how he is going to fulfil his promise to his chicken friend Avian to help get her flock of a thousand chickens through wolf territory to the safety of the plateau in the Lockjaws. Meanwhile, Faelan's arch-enemy, the white wolf Varg, is dead-set on stopping anyone from crossing the boundary that he patrols. Faelan and Avian's attempt to free the chickens is fraught with danger. And Faelan makes some surprising discoveries about his family along the way ... that might interfere with Weylin's plans to be Pack Leader.
1st April 2024
Author: Steph Matuku Publisher: Huia Publishers
An amazing building rises on the edge of town - it's the dream factory. Every night, it sends out magical mist. Flying cars, flower cakes and talking tigers fill people's dreams. And the next day, the people make those dreams come true. But when a kereru flies into the dream factory, and a feather floats into a cog, everything goes terribly wrong.
Author: Minky Stapleton Publisher: Scholastic
Meet Bubbles, a lovable, funny, one-of-a-kind young manatee with a love for speed! Bubbles is a gassy little manatee who loves swimming fast.
Author: Peter Rawnsley Publisher: Cuba Press
Peter Rawnsley writes of movement even as his own world becomes increasingly still. He is acutely aware of the natural world around him - its softness and light as well as its brutality - from Karehana Bay to Castlepoint to Tijuana, and of his own place in it. He nods to the inevitable passing of time, but importantly there is still time, and that's something he's grateful for. He feels blessed to be here. Stones and Kisses is a tender, reflective and playful collection from one of Aotearoa's best-kept secrets.
1 April 2024
Author: Lily Duval Publisher: Canterbury University Press
Why isn't Aotearoa famous for its insects? We have weta that can survive being frozen, weevils with 'snouts' almost as long as their bodies, and the world's only alpine cicadas. There is mounting evidence that insect numbers are plummeting all over the world. But the insect apocalypse isn't just a faraway problem - it's also happening here in Aotearoa. In recent years, we have lost a number of our native insects to extinction and many more are teetering on the brink. Without insects, the world is in trouble. Insects are our pollinators, waste removers and ecosystem engineers - they are vital for a healthy planet. So why don't more people care about the fate of the tiny but mighty six-legged beings that shape our world?
Author: Ashia Ismail-Singer Publisher: David Bateman Ltd
'From Africa to India, the Middle East, France, the UK and New Zealand, this book will take you on a journey full of flavours and the melded cultures that are my extended family.' Ashia Ismail-Singer Author of My Indian Kitchen and Saffron Swirls and Cardamom Dust, Ashia Ismail-Singer draws on her family's rich and diverse cultures to dish up an inspired banquet where spices are the heroes and food is designed to be shared. The Laden Table is the perfect cookbook for anyone who want to create a bit of magic for their next gathering from canapes, drinks and summer salads to moreish side dishes, hearty mains and luscious cakes and sweet bites.
1st April 2024