Profile She has also written for television, stage, radio and film, and has been the recipient of several awards and fellowships. Johnson is the co-founder and co-Creative Director of the Auckland Readers’ and Writers’ Festival. Selected published works
Biography Her powerful first collection of poems, The Bleeding Ballerina (1987), was followed by two collections of short stories, The Glass Whittler (1989) and All the Tenderness Left in the World (1993), and two novels, Crimes of Neglect (1992) and The Heart’s Wild Surf (1996). Johnson’s work is marked by a dry irony, a sharp-edged humour that focuses unerringly on the frailties and foolishness of her characters. Pomposity and self-delusion are favourite targets: take, for example, the creative writing tutor in A One-Page Statement, the eager New Age clients in The Deep Resounding, the arrogant Werner in Menschenfresser and the vicar’s wife in The Heart’s Wild Surf. There is compassion, though, and sensitivity in the development of complex situations. The Heart’s Wild Surf, set in Fiji in 1918, is a subtle, delicately drawn, yet passionately intense portrayal of a family under immense strain. Johnson was the recipient of the Meridian Energy Katherine Mansfield Fellowship in 2000 and in 2003 The Shag Incident won the Deutz Medal for Fiction in the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, an honour for which her work had previously been shortlisted three times. The Shag Incident was described by the judging panel as a book “clearly by a writer at the peak of her powers … she is fully deserving of the recognition of excellence that this award bestows”. |