The New Word
Fiction
William Brandt
Catherine Chidgey
Joy Cowley
Alan Duff
Fiona Farrell
Maurice Gee
Patricia Grace
Charlotte Grimshaw
Keri Hulme
Witi Ihimaera
Stephanie Johnson
Lloyd Jones
Fiona Kidman
Elizabeth Knox
Craig Marriner
Owen Marshall
Vincent O'Sullivan
Carl Shuker
Elizabeth Smither
C.K. Stead
Philip Temple
Albert Wendt
Damien Wilkins
         
Joy Cowley

Profile
Joy Cowley has been a pioneering and sustaining influence on writing for children in New Zealand. She was a founding writer for Learning Media’s Ready to Read programme and other educational reading series. Over the past 25 years, most New Zealand children have learned to read through her books.

Selected published works
Classical Music, 1999; Holy Days, 2001; Hunter, Book of the Year, New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards 2006.

Joy Cowley's children's books can be found here.

Agent
Richards Literary Agency PO Box 31240 Milford Auckland
rla.richards@clear.net.nz

 

Publishers
Scholastic New Zealand Limited www.scholastic.co.nz
Penguin Books New Zealand www.penguin.co.nz

Biography
Born in Levin in 1936, Joy Cowley has had diverse careers – artist, photographer, builder’s labourer, farm worker, pharmaceutical apprentice, newspaper children’s page editor and, of course, writer. She began writing seriously in 1960, sending two or three short stories to the New Zealand Listener each month. When a short story from Landfall was republished in the United States, Doubleday publishers wrote asking for a novel. In response, she wrote Nest in a Falling Tree in six months. It was published by Doubleday in 1967 to enthusiastic reviews and was made into a film, with the screenplay by Roald Dahl and his wife, Patricia Neal, cast in the leading role.

Her first picture book, The Duck and the Gun, was illustrated by Edward Sorel, New York 1969, was re-illustrated by Robyn Belton and published in 1985 and subsequently won the Russell Clark Medal in New Zealand.

Cowley’s 45-year writing career has taken her around the globe. She loves to meet children and hear what they think about her stories and life in general. “The day I’m no longer with children is the day I stop writing for them, because the energy flow comes from them and goes back to them,” she says.

Love, humour and a little twist at the end are key components of Cowley’s writing. She has written more than 600 titles for all ages and her books are available in most countries where English is a first or second language. Many books have also been translated. One of her short stories, The Silk, is a perennial choice in New Zealand anthologies. Her award-winning novel, The Silent One, was made into a very successful feature film in 1985.

Many of Cowley’s awards have been for the corpus of her work as much as for individual works. She received a New Zealand Commemoration Medal in 1990, the Order of the British Empire in 1992 for her services to children’s literature, the Margaret Mahy Lecture Award in 1993 and an Honorary Doctorate from Massey University in 1993. She was awarded the Roberta Long Medal (Alberta) in 2002, and in the same year, the New Zealand Children’s Literature Foundation inaugurated the Joy Cowley Award in her honour. She was given the A. W. Reed Contribution to New Zealand Literature Award at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards 2004, an award presented biennially in recognition of an outstanding contribution to New Zealand literature and an involvement in activities which foster and promote literature to wider audiences.

 
info@creativenz.govt.nz
www.creativenz.govt.nz