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  • Published: 1 March 2012
  • ISBN: 9781869794750
  • Imprint: RHNZ Adult ebooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 472

The Hungry Heart

Journeys With William Colenso



Shortlisted for the NZ Post Award this fascinating, innovative biography is of a true original and significant figure in NZ's early colonisation.

Shortlisted for the NZ Post Award this fascinating, innovative biography is of a true original and significant figure in NZ's early colonisation.

"I love doubters: of a truly honest doubter I have great hope."

Printer, botanist and missionary, William Colenso was a nineteenth-century maverick, a true original. He protested at the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, arguing that Maori did not fully understand its implications. He became a troubled conscience during the white-hot period of colonisation, maintaining his dissident voice throughout his career.

Peter Wells refreshes our vision of this awkward, highly talented man, who lost his family after the church expelled him for fathering a child by a Maori woman. Rejected by church, family and friends, Colenso made botany his home and lovingly described the plants of New Zealand. At the same time he wrote a series of remarkable pamphlets that open up our past. 'I write for future generations,' he noted in 1881. The time has come to welcome Colenso back.

  • Published: 1 March 2012
  • ISBN: 9781869794750
  • Imprint: RHNZ Adult ebooks
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 472

About the author

Peter Wells

Peter Wells is a writer and film-maker. He studied history at the University of Auckland and the University of Warwick, England. His short stories, novels, memoirs and biographies have won many awards and accolades. He spearheaded the saving and restoration of the Civic Theatre in Auckland in the 1980s, and is co-founder of the Auckland Writers and Readers Festival. In 2006 was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services to literature and film.

Peter won the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction for his first book of short stories, Dangerous Desires, which was published in New Zealand, New York and London. The book also won, among other awards, the PEN (NZ) Best First Book in Prose Award in 1992. He has published another book of short fiction, The Duration of a Kiss (New York, Sydney and London), and a memoir Long Loop Home, which won the 2002 Montana New Zealand Book Award for Biography. His published novels include Boy Overboard, which was shortlisted for the 1998 Commonwealth Prize (Pacific–Asia Region), and Iridescence, which was runner-up for the Deutz Medal Winner for Fiction at the Montana Book of the Year Awards and a finalist in the Tasmania-Pacific Award. In 2009 Peter Wells won the Copyright Licensing Limited Award to write a book on William Colenso, The Hungry Heart: Journeys with William Colenso, published in 2011, which was shortlisted for the NZ Post Awards. In 2011 Peter Wells was awarded the Michael King Fellowship. Peter has a blog at peterwellsblog.com.


The New Zealand Herald called Iridescence ‘without question one of the most important New Zealand novels of the year’, noting that the ‘final pages have a tender grace to them, a respect for the redemptive possibilities of everyday life, which had me in tears.’

Metro declared The Hungry Heart the best New Zealand biography of 2011, saying that it ‘ranks amongst the finest and most fascinating biographies ever produced in this country’. ‘The conventional wisdom among biographers is that they ought to keep themselves out of the story and maintain a judicious distance from their subjects. Peter Wells dares do otherwise . . . The risks Wells takes pay off.’

North & South greeted The Hungry Heart with ‘Everyone’s favourite polymath is back’, calling it ‘a remarkable book about a versatile colonial figure’. ‘The reviewer notes that Wells’s ‘skill allows him not just to compile a compelling narrative but to subtly pepper it with micro-essays on many themes that revolve around the enigmatic figure of Colenso. ’The New Zealand Herald reviewer noted that ‘the challenge of biography, and history writing too, is to include, without strain, both the known and the unknown in one frame’ before going on to say ‘Wells does gracefully, with an extra dimension that goes beyond mere technical skill to something that might be called wisdom.’

Also by Peter Wells

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Praise for The Hungry Heart

. . . a remarkable book about a versatile colonial figure . . . his skill allows him not just to compile a compelling narrative but to subtly pepper it with micro-essays on many themes that revolve around the enigmatic figure of Colenso.

North & South

. . . the challenge of biography, and history writing too, is to include, without strain, both the known and the unknown in one frame . . . Wells does gracefully, with an extra dimension that goes beyond mere technical skill to something that might be called wisdom.

New Zealand Herald

[It] ranks amongst the finest and most fascinating biographies ever produced in this country . . . The conventional wisdom among biographers is that they ought to keep themselves out of the story and maintain a judicious distance from their subjects. Peter Wells dares do otherwise . . . The risks Wells takes pay off.

Metro

In the most basic way I can say it – I thought this book was fantastic. Wells has done an amazing job of research and writing to create it, and for that I thank him.

Kimaya McIntosh, Booksellers NZ

Awards & recognition

Copyright Licensing (CLL) Writer's Award

Winner  •  2009  •  Copyright Licensing (CLL) Writer's Award