Profile Selected published works
Biography His novels are: Gilmore’s Dairy and Splinter, both
early works based in and on his home town; Choo Woo (1998), a disturbing
and controversial tale of a girl’s sexual abuse by her stepfather, and
the award-winning and much acclaimed The Book of Fame, a fictionalised
recreation of the 1905 All Black rugby union team’s tour of Europe, and
winner of the Deutz Medal for Fiction in the 2001 Montana New Zealand Book Awards.
The Book of Fame also won the $40,000 Tasmania Pacific Fiction Prize
in 2003 and was successfully adapted for the stage. Here at the End of the
World We Learn to Dance was joint runner-up for the Deutz Medal for Fiction
in the Montana New Zealand Book Awards 2003. His most recent work is the well-received
Paint Your Wife. Jones’s short fiction collection, Swimming to Australia (1991), was shortlisted for the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction, and his stories have been anthologised in New Zealand’s Vital Writing, The Oxford Book of New Zealand Short Stories and elsewhere. Jones’s distinctive interest in popular culture and sport found expression in a collection of sports writing by other prominent New Zealand writers and in the curation of an exhibition, for which he wrote the accompanying essay, depicting the phenomenon of the New Zealand Saturday, later published as Last Saturday (1994). A children’s picture book, Napoleon and the Chicken Farmer, with illustrations by Graeme Gash, was published in 2003. Jones was also the instigator of a series of essays by prominent New Zealanders,
sponsored by Montana New Zealand and published under his own imprint, Four Winds
Press. He is a highly respected journalist and travel writer whose work is published
in magazines and newspapers in many parts of the world. Mister Pip won the South East
Asia and South Pacific Region of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize Best Book Award 2007.
Jones is the 2007 recipient of the Creative New Zealand Berlin Writers' Residency. |