Profile Selected published works Philip Temple's non-fiction can be found here.
Biography Temple became a full-time writer in 1972. Over a period of 40 years he has published more than 40 books as well as numerous articles. He has held several fellowships, including the Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellowship (1979), the Burns Fellowship (1980), the 1996 New Zealand National Library Research Fellowship, a German DAAD government arts award (1987) and the 2003 Creative New Zealand Berlin Writers’ Residency. In 2003, Philip was also invested as an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit (ONZM) for Services to Literature. A Sort of Conscience: The Wakefields was named Biography of the Year at the 2003 Montana New Zealand Book Awards and was awarded the Archivists and Records Association of New Zealand Ian Wards Prize and the Ernest Scott History Prize from the University of Melbourne, Australia. It was shortlisted for the Tasmania Pacific Bicentenary History Prize. It is an ambitious and engaging study of the extraordinary Wakefield family who played such a major role in New Zealand’s colonisation by Britain in the nineteenth century. The New Zealand Listener chose A Sort of Conscience as one of its Ten Best Books of the Year for 2002, one of only two New Zealand titles in the list. In 2005, Temple was recipient of the Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement in Non-fiction. In 2007 he was granted the degree of Doctor of Literature by the University of Otago for his 'published contributions of special excellence in linguistic, social, literary and historical knowledge'. |