Profile Selected published works
Biography Mahy is a towering literary talent, which was recognised in 2006 when she won the world’s premier prize for children’s writing, the Hans Christian Andersen Award. She has produced a phenomenal body of work: more than 100 picture books, more than 200 stories for the international educational market, many novels for children and for young adults, anthologies of stories and poetry, and plays for stage and television, both for adults and children. Mahy’s work has been adapted for film and television,both for adults and children. Mahy’s work has been adapted for film and television, and translated into more than 15 languages. She has won Britain’s Carnegie Medal twice (1982, 1984), the Arbuthnot Lecture Award (1989), multiple awards in New Zealand, England, Italy and Holland, and inclusion in prestigious listings complied by United States journal editors, librarians and educationalists. She has been in constant demand as a speaker at international conferences since 1980, and a collection of her major speeches was published as A Dissolving Ghost (Victoria University Press) in 2000. In 1993, Mahy’s contribution to literature was rewarded with New Zealand’s
highest civil honour, the Order of New Zealand, and in the same year, she received
an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Canterbury. She was the first recipient
of the A.W. Reed Lifetime Achievement Award given by the New Zealand publishing
industry in 1997, and has lent her name to the Margaret Mahy Medal and Lecture
Award bestowed by the New Zealand Children’s Literature Foundation. In
2002, she was awarded Auckland College of Education’s inaugural Sylvia
Ashton-Warner Fellowship. In 2005, Mahy’s contribution to New Zealand
literature was recognised when the Arts Foundation of New Zealand installed
her as a Living Icon. She was also presented the Prime Minister’s Award
for Literary Achievement in Fiction. |