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Witi Ihimaera

    7 febbraio 1944

    Witi Ihimaera è un acclamato romanziere e autore di racconti della Nuova Zelanda, rinomato per la sua prosa magistrale e le sue profonde esplorazioni dell'eredità Māori. È un pioniere della letteratura Māori, essendo stato il primo a pubblicare sia un romanzo che una raccolta di racconti. La sua opera è caratterizzata da una voce unica che collega le narrazioni tradizionali Māori con la vita contemporanea. Ihimaera ha anche operato come professore, dedicandosi al progresso della letteratura Māori.

    The Parihaka woman
    Nights in the Gardens of Spain
    Pounamu Pounamu
    The Whale Rider (16pt Large Print Edition)
    Native Son
    La balena e la bambina
    • La balena e la bambina

      • 179pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      Narra una leggenda che i maori arrivarono in Nuova Zelanda dalle Hawaii grazie a un uomo che attraversò l'oceano a cavallo di una balena. E dove vive la piccola Kahu si sa da sempre che il capo del villaggio è la reincarnazione di quel mitico antenato. Ma ora che il capo del villaggio è il nonno di Kahu, ora che è ormai giunto il momento che passi lo scettro a un suo erede, l'erede non c'è. O meglio, c'è solo la piccola Kahu, ma secondo la tradizione nessuna donna può essere l'incarnazione dell'uomo che cavalcò la balena. Kahu dovrà affrontare una lunga battaglia con se stessa e con l'amatissimo nonno, per dimostrare di poter essere quello che la storia vuole che sia. E saranno proprio le balene a dimostrare che anche una bambina le può cavalcare...

      La balena e la bambina
    • Native Son

      • 448pagine
      • 16 ore di lettura

      The memoir delves into the life of a young Maori writer in 1972, capturing his journey as he prepares for his debut publication while grappling with his identity and heritage. It reveals the struggles of a native son seeking acceptance and a voice in a predominantly Pakeha world, alongside personal challenges like love and self-discovery. This sequel to the acclaimed first volume chronicles his experiences in education, relationships, and his evolution into New Zealand's first Maori novelist, offering a rich and powerful narrative.

      Native Son
    • Kahu, an eight-year-old girl, yearns for her great-grandfather's love while grappling with the expectations of her Maori tribe in Whangara, New Zealand. As the first female in generations, she faces the challenge of being overlooked for the role of chief due to tradition. However, her unique ability to communicate with whales, inherited from the legendary whale rider, empowers her. With this gift, Kahu seeks to connect her tribe with their ancestry and prove her worth, ultimately striving to change the future of her people.

      The Whale Rider (16pt Large Print Edition)
    • First published in 1972, Pounamu Pounamu introduced an exciting new voice into New Zealand literature. Most of Witi Ihimaera's stories, based on the East Coast, describe a traditional rural, communal way of life facing huge pressures from the drift by many Maori to the cities. This was to be a constant theme in Ihimaera's future writing.

      Pounamu Pounamu
    • David Munro has everything a man could wish for - a beautiful wife, two adoring daughters, a top academic position, and a circle of devoted friends. But he also has another life - lived mainly at night and frequently in what he comes to know as 'The Gardens of Spain', the places where gay and bisexual men meet. Now he must choose which of his two lives to follow... This landmark book from one of New Zealand's most highly regarded authors explores the precarious divide between sexuality and social mores. It examines the dilemmas of contemporary gay culture with anger, laughter, sensitivity, and honesty.

      Nights in the Gardens of Spain
    • The Parihaka woman

      • 318pagine
      • 12 ore di lettura

      "A wonderfully surprising, inventive and deeply moving riff on fact and fiction, history and imagination from one of New Zealand's finest and most memorable storytellers. /b>here has never been a New Zealand novel quite like The Parihaka Woman. Richly imaginative and original, weaving together fact and fiction, it sets the remarkable story of Erenora against the historical background of the turbulent and compelling events that occurred in Parihaka during the 1870s and 1880s. Parihaka is the place Erenora calls home, a peaceful Taranaki settlement overcome by war and land confiscation. As her world is threatened, Erenora must find within herself the strength, courage and ingenuity to protect those whom she loves. And, like a Shakespearean heroine, she must change herself before she can take up her greatest challenge and save her exiled husband, Horitana."

      The Parihaka woman
    • Beautiful New Zealand

      • 160pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      A living land of wonder, a shimmering, restless sea, a sky of endless promise. Beautiful North Island of New Zealand contains text by Witi Ihimaera and photographs by Holger Leue. All of New Zealand's most famous landmarks are represented in this book; the Auckland Harbour Bridge, The Sky Tower, Cathedral Square, As well as more unusual images of people and places.

      Beautiful New Zealand
    • Bulibasha (16pt Large Print Edition)

      • 632pagine
      • 23 ore di lettura

      Set against the backdrop of New Zealand's East Coast, the narrative revolves around two rival patriarchs vying for the title of Bulibasha, the King of the Gypsies. Their intense struggle highlights themes of power, identity, and cultural heritage, as they navigate personal and communal challenges in their quest for dominance. The story delves into the complexities of leadership and the bonds of family within the unique context of the Gypsy community.

      Bulibasha (16pt Large Print Edition)