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A Roderick Finlayson Reader

by Roderick Finlayson

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Roderick Finlayson (1904–1992) was one of the pioneering New Zealand writers who came to prominence in the 1930s. This selection of his fiction and non-fiction––some of it unpublished, much of it previously uncollected––edited with an introduction by Roger Hickin, includes stories from his four short story collections, two chapters from the novel Tidal Creek, excerpts from an unpublished novel, the 1940 essay Our Life in this Land, autobiography, memoir, articles, letters and poems. ‘If the honours and rewards now available for New Zealand writers included canonization, Roderick Finlayson would be the obvious candidate, probably the only one.’ ––Dennis McEldowney ‘. . . our first writer to move with any ease or authenticity among the most vital traditions this country has.’ ––Vincent O’Sullivan '. . . an artist whose commitment to the recognition and celebration of taha Maori was exemplary and prophetic.’ ––O. E. Middleton ‘. . . it was he who wrote of Maori and Pakeha and the importance of conserving the land, fifty years before there was a bandwagon for protesters to jump on.’ ––Kay Holloway ‘I cross my heart when I say there are stories of yours, there are pages, which I would rather have written than anything I have written.’ ––Frank Sargeson in a letter to Roderick Finlayson

About the Author

Roderick Finlayson (1904–1992) was born in Auckland but spent much of his young life among Māori in the Bay of Plenty before buying a house in Weymouth on the Manukau Harbour where he would spend the rest of his life. His early stories were of Māori losing their land and culture to the rapacious settler culture. His first collection of stories, Brown Man’s Burden, was published in 1938, followed in 1942 by Sweet Beulah Land. Many of his stories appeared in the Sydney journal The Bulletin and the episodic novel Tidal Creek was published in Australia by Angus & Robertson in 1948. Another novel, The Schooner Came to Atia was published in 1952. 1965 saw the publication of The Springing Fern, an episodic historical novel for children based on a series of Primary School Bulletins. Finlayson's monograph on D'Arcy Cresswell came out in 1972, followed in 1973 by an expanded version of Brown Man's Burden. Finlayson published two further collections of stories: Other Lovers in 1976 and In Georgina's Shady Garden in 1988.

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