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Anahera Press

~ Small press publishing company based in Auckland, Aotearoa NZ

Author Archives: Anahera Press

Launch Day

24 Friday Jun 2022

Posted by Anahera Press in Briar Wood, Events

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Mānawatia a Matariki. It feels auspicious to be launching this new collection, A Book of Rongo and Te Rangahau, at this special time. Ka mua, ka muri, walking backwards into the future – in this collection poet Briar Wood considers how the lives of the two wāhine toa of the title, nineteenth century tūpuna of Ngāpuhi, continue to impact their descendants today.

We have made a short video to celebrate the launch, please check out:

Video by Annie Goldson.

Buy Briar’s book here: www.anahera.co.nz/books

Thank you to Creative New Zealand for their support of this publication.

Anahera Press re-opens

10 Sunday Jan 2021

Posted by Anahera Press in Serie Barford

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Anahera Press re-opens: We are delighted to announce that at Anahera Press we’re opening our doors again after a 3-year hiatus. Our first offering will be Sleeping with Stones, a poetry book by Serie Barford, to be released during Matariki 2021. In 2022 we will release Briar Wood’s third collection, A Book of Rongo and Te Rangahau. Thank you to those colleagues and friends who supported our recent grant application. Ngā mihi nui.

Anahera Press on hiatus

08 Friday Jun 2018

Posted by Anahera Press in Uncategorized

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Kia ora koutou, Anahera Press is taking a break while publisher Kiri Piahana-Wong is on maternity leave. All of our existing in print titles are still for sale! Buy or order at your local bookshop, or order from this website by clicking the Books tab. We regret we will be closed for submissions during this time. Ka kite ano.

Rāwāhi shortlisted for the Ockham NZ Book Awards 2018 Poetry Prize

16 Wednesday May 2018

Posted by Anahera Press in Awards, Briar Wood

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Here at Anahera Press we are delighted that our most recent publication, Rāwāhi by Briar Wood, has been shortlisted for the Ockham NZ Book Awards Poetry Prize. Warmest congratulations to you Briar!

‘Marae Shuffle’ by Apirana Taylor

01 Thursday Feb 2018

Posted by Anahera Press in Apirana Taylor

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SHORT STORY CLUB – 1st FEBRUARY 2018

Read the story being discussed on Jesse Mulligan’s show on Radio New Zealand on 1st February 2018.

We hope you enjoy this brand new short story by Apirana Taylor (author of Five Strings, Anahera Press, 2017).

Marae Shuffle    

Just before the first ray of sunlight peeped in the door. ‘Karanga. Karanga.’ Clang, clang rang the bell. ‘E oho. E oho e te whanau.’

Aw jeez, these Ngati’s got no sleep kawa, I thought.

An arm of sunlight reached through the window. In the shadows and light on the other side of the whare shapes began to shuffle and wriggle. I turned on my back and gazed up at the kowhaiwhai on the roof above me. It’s been a long time since I’ve been on a marae. Oh just one more hour’s sleep, I sighed.

Clang. Clang. Despite the bell some slept on. My cousin Hepa snored loud enough to blow the roof off and my bro droned away beneath  the pou of our tipuna.

Clang. There was no escape. I had to, maranga. I lay stretched out covered by my sleeping bag and surrounded by others who slept or began to shuffle making moaning noises and calling as they woke. ‘Kia ora sis.’

I stretched out my long arm and groped about for my overnight bag. My socks are in there, I thought. Grasp grapple. Nothing. The overnighter had disappeared. What to do.

I lay hidden from the world by my sleeping bag. Half naked and faced with the problem of getting dresed without exposing my wherewithal to all.

My feet poked up like tongues at the end of my mattress. My bag was just beyond my feet. I shuffled and stretched my leg and toes towards the elusive bag and continued to clasp my bed clothes about me. A similar shuffling and wriggling began on the opposite wall of the house as more manuhiri woke. ‘Morena. Waiata mai ra, Kiri te Kanawa,’ said Manu to her daughter who snored high as the top string.

At last I hooked my toe over my bag’s handle. I was amazed by the way I managed to crane it up to my hand, under the blankets, without being noticed as I twisted about in my mini lava lava.

A change of underwear and socks was needed and they were in my overnighter somewhere. In the semi dark I groped about for these necessary items. They were nowhere to be found. I emptied the bag beside me. Whose is this phone and whose is this lipstick. Struthe. It’s not my bag.

You idiot. I cursed myself. You left your bloody bag up by your pillow. There it is tucked away under your ancestor’s feet. I reached out. I released my sleeping bag with my left hand clutched the bed clothing with my right, keeping myself covered, as I stretched out with my left and grabbed the overnighter. The socks and undies weren’t in it.

I gave up. Somehow I’d worked myself into a tangle. One end of my lava lava was twisted around my collywobbles and the other was wrapped about my neck. I wriggled about in the dim shadow light and untangled myself. A couple more acrobatic contortions and I was ready to begin again. Off with the old and on with the new.

I found my undies and socks. They were beside me all the time. By a  miracle I kept undercover and wriggled into them.

The carved faces of our ancestors gazed at me as they looked over all who slept within the house. The whaikorero, laughter, songs and chit chat. They heard it all as they sat in the fields of tukutuku under the stars on the roof.

‘E oho. Kia tere.’ Wake up. Quick. I kite au te rangatira o te tangata whenua e tu ana ki mua i te tatau.

How could I get my trousers on. Right foot stretched toe wriggled. Hook the daks up from the foot of the mattress. Still undercover. Scuffle shuffle I wriggled into my pants. I sat up and put on my shirt.

I watched other manuhiri as they stirred and wriggled out of their cocoons. Beyond the door outside, I saw the tangata whenua gathered and waiting for karakia. ‘Me karakia tatau i mua i te  parakuihi.’

My shoes have disappeared. Where did I put them? Who shifted them? Who’s wearing them?

Clang Clang. Karanga karanga. As day dawned we answered the call and gathered outside the whare beneath the arms of our tipuna. I stood before the dawn in bare feet with my shirt on backwards, ready for karakia.

Rāwāhi by Briar Wood: Available Now

16 Monday Oct 2017

Posted by Anahera Press in Briar Wood

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Today at Anahera Press we are delighted to announce that this beautiful poetry book, Rāwāhi by Briar Wood, is now available for sale. You can buy copies of Rāwāhi direct from the Anahera website by clicking on the ‘Books’ tab; or from all good independent bookstores, eg. Unity, The Women’s Bookshop, etc. Congratulations Briar!

Ebook announcement

21 Wednesday Jun 2017

Posted by Anahera Press in Apirana Taylor, Simone Kaho

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Did you know that recent Anahera titles are also available as ebooks in the Kindle and Kobo stores? If you are after an electronic copy of Five Strings by Apirana Taylor or Lucky Punch by Simone Kaho at a great price, head along to those stores to download your copy. You’ll find other older Anahera Press titles there too. Don’t have an e-reader? Kindle offers a free app you can use to read ebooks on your smart phone, tablet or computer. Happy reading 🙂

New book announcement

31 Wednesday May 2017

Posted by Anahera Press in Briar Wood

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We are delighted to announce that in October Anahera Press will release a new poetry collection by Briar Wood. Rāwāhi is a radiant work where sky-borne sealines are inspired by earthly encounters. Rāwāhi will be produced with a gorgeous front cover image by artist Reuben Paterson. Look out for this book from October 16th!

Apirana Taylor’s book launch

22 Monday May 2017

Posted by Anahera Press in Apirana Taylor, Events

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Five Strings by Apirana Taylor was launched at Auckland Central City Library on Wednesday 17th May. Close to 100 people attended the launch. The book was launched by Witi Ihimaera (pictured on the left; Apirana and Anahera Press publisher Kiri Piahana-Wong seated). Thanks so much to everyone who attended! And do look out for Five Strings in all good bookstores – or buy directly from this website by clicking on the Books tab (and we offer free postage both in NZ and internationally). (Photo credit Karlo Mila.)

All welcome to Apirana Taylor’s book launch

09 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Anahera Press in Apirana Taylor, Events

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