Author: Craig Johnston

Versions Tuawhā update

Kia ora!

Submissions for this year’s Versions project have closed, and we’re working on editing and proofing, getting ready to publish later in the year. Warmest thanks to everyone who submitted some of their creative work.

In this, the fourth year, we’ve had more submissions than ever before – hooray!

If you want a fun creative project, keep your eye out for the announcement of next year’s Versions submissions. You can write a short story, flash fiction, a poem, a play, a song — we even had a visual arts submission this year!

This is a great way to become a published author – we give you a prompt, you write something, and we take care of all the rest. Then we have a book launch where you can come and celebrate being part of the project.

It’s fun, there’s no pressure, and it might just inspire you to create something else.

If you have any questions about Versions, email content@pncc.govt.nz

Latin America & Spain Film Festival

The 21st Latin America and Spain Film Festival runs from the 7th to the 24th of September and includes movies from Cuba, Spain, Brazil, Peru, Chile, Mexico and Argentina. The selection includes a wide range of genres, topics and styles, giving you the chance of feeling closer to Latin American and Spanish histories and cultures through the lenses of great film makers and artists.

See the programme here.

Chinese Language week

New Zealand Chinese Language Week 17-23rd September 

New Zealand Chinese Language Week (NZCLW) was first launched in 2014 designed to increase Chinese Language learning in New Zealand. NZCLW seeks to bridge the cultural and linguistic gap by delivering fun and practical initiatives that encourage people to learn Chinese. Celebrate this year with our local Chinese organisations who have organised an exciting range of activities in the city. 

At Central library 

Sunday 17th September 

An afternoon with PN Chinese School  

1.30pm-3.30pm 

Calligraphy, storytelling and crafting workshops.

First Floor, Children’s area 

Raising Bilingual kids in Chinese Culture 

1.15-2.15pm 

Presentation with guest speaker Melody Chang. Run by the Manawatū Chinese Association, Active Learning.  

All parents welcome.

Oroua Room, Ground Floor 

17th September- 23rd September 

Student Work Exhibition 

Come and see what the PN Chinese School have been working on! 

First Floor, across from the Community Languages area 

Display by Manawatū Chinese Association 

Learn more about Cantonese Language! 

First Floor, across from the Community Languages area 

As part of NZCLW 2023 the book ‘Weka’s Waiata’ by Nikki Robinson has been published in Mandarin Chinese, te reo Māori and English. It’s a trilingual children’s book!

“Together We Read” on Libby

From Sep 27 to Oct 11, there’s a programme called “Together We Read” on Libby, which lets multiple people read/listen to the same title at the same time – no wait lists!

This year the featured title is Aotearoa-based author Charity Norman’s Remember Me.

In Remember Me, Emily Kirkland returns to New Zealand to care for her father, who suffers from dementia. As his memory fades and his guard slips, she begins to understand him for the first time – and to glimpse shattering truths about his past. Truths she’d rather were kept buried.

The ebook and audiobook can be read on all major computers and devices, including iPhone®, iPad®, Android™ phones and tablets, Kobo® tablets and eReaders, and Chromebook™ and there are no waiting lists or holds. The title will automatically expire at the end of the lending period, and there are no fines for late return.

Find out more about Libby here.

See more about Together We Read here.

Or pop in and see us!

MAVtech Display of Cameras

Thanks to the wonderful people at MAVtech (the Museum of Audio and Visual Technology in Foxton), we have an amazing display of cool old video and cine camera technology in the Sound & Vision area on the Mezzanine Floor throughout most of September (4th – 22nd). Including clips on the projector screen sourced from Manawatū Heritage showing the kind of thing those cameras would have recorded.

The display will include actual cameras from days of yore, and information on each one, detailing the progression of cine camera technology through the years.

It’s a fun way to explore the long journey from the first consumer camera to the phone in your pocket!

Manawatū author finalist for Best First Novel in Ngaio Marsh Awards

Congrats to Riley Chance (aka Roger McEwan) whose book Surveillance is a finalist for Best First Novel in the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Awards!

McEwan’s novel attempts to answer the question: “what would New Zealand look like under mass surveillance?”

The author, who originally wanted to remain anonymous behind his nom de plume, finally revealed his true identity recently, stating that it was because “I need to get along to events. If there’s a writers’ festival and they say can I come and talk, I have to.

The Ngaio Marsh Awards were established in 2010 by indefatigable #yeahnoir fan Craig Sisterson, to promote crime, mystery and thriller writers from New Zealand.

Another local author made the longlist for the Ngaios: GB Ralph with Murder on Milverton Square. Go, local authors!

Music is a portal to reading

A special feature blog post by Senior Service Guide Zak.

Reading and noise: not two things you’d think would go well together (unless you’re enjoying an audiobook, many of which are available right now through the library on Libby or BorrowBox)… But a good book paired with the right album, I find, is like cheese and wine.

My favourite pairing recently has been Robert Jackson Bennett’s Divine Cities trilogy with the eponymous first album of Finnish prog-folk band Auri.

Divine Cities is what you get when you cross a spy thriller with the sprawling, reality-shattering antics of our favourite fantasy worlds – the gods are dead, the miracles that made life livable no longer work, the people live in squalor, and as they try to eke out a life without the deities that defined their society a series of bizzare murders are making the best and brightest think: maybe magic isn’t completely gone from the world after all. 

Wonder, possibility and myth are the name of the game in this series, which makes folk music – with its traditional instruments speaking of days past and cultures kept alive – a perfect fit.

Auri brings to mind everything from isolated Northern-Irish hamlets to sweeping steampunk skylines, to mysterious coastlines begging to be explored. There’s something about the music that really gets the imagination going, the sound drawing crisp pictures of what you’re reading out of the page – dancing pennywhistles, soaring strings, some of the cleanest choir vocals you’ve ever heard, all accompanied by a rock drumbeat that reminds you not to fall too comfortably into your chair – the story you’re reading has stakes, perhaps apocalyptic ones. 

I’ve never found an album that goes so well with a book it relaxes you into the world and gets your heart racing at the same time… but that’s exactly what happened here. I’d recommend either of these two things alone any day, but truly: do yourself a favour and try them together.

The Divine Cities trilogy – City of Stairs, City of Blades, and City of Miracles – by Robert Jackson Bennett is available at the City Library in paperback, and Auri can be streamed wherever you get your music. [Editor: Auri’s second album Those We Don’t Speak Of has just been ordered for the City Library.]

Website Refresh!

We’re excited to tell you that the City Library website is getting a refresh!

From Monday July 24, the look of the website will change a little, but all your favourite things will still be there.

The aim was to make it easier to find the information you need, faster. Better accessibility with less scrolling!

There are some further improvements coming, but in the meantime, please let us know if you have any questions.

Roslyn Library reopens on Tuesday July 18!

We are delighted to inform you that Roslyn Community Library is all set to reopen its doors on Tuesday 18th July, and we can’t wait to invite our beloved community back in to join us for a hot cuppa and a bikkie when they do!

Our dedicated team will be heading back into the library on Monday to give it a thorough tidy-up and ensure everything is perfectly prepared for the reopening.

While no special programmes are scheduled for the first week, we are simply excited to return to normality and get back to business as usual.

If you have any questions, please reach out to us. We can’t wait to welcome you back!

Matariki | Puanga

On Friday July 14, we’ll be closed in observation of Matariki | Puanga.

Nationally, the holiday is generally referred to as Matariki, but Rangitāne o Manawatū traditionally give prominence to Puanga, an important star near the Matariki cluster that can be easier to see in this part of the motu.

Check out our Matariki webpage for a great list of resources, information and activities!