What You Made of It: A Memoir, 1987-2020: 2021: 3: Volume 3
By (Author) C. K. Stead
Auckland University Press
Auckland University Press
13th May 2021
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
823.2
Hardback
464
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
Having left the university to write full-time at the end of volume two, Stead throws himself into his work. In novels like Sister Hollywood and My Name Was Judas, criticism in the London Review of Books and the Financial Times, poetry and memoir, Stead establishes his international reputation as novelist, poet and critic. It is also a period when Stead's fearless lucidity on matters literary and political embroil him in argument - from The Bone People to the meaning of the Treaty to the controversy over a London writer's flat. What was it like to be Allen Curnow's designated 'Critic across the Crescent'; or alternatively to be labelled 'the Tonya Harding of NZ Lit' Covering Stead's travels from Los Angeles to Liguria, Croatia and Crete to Caracas and Colombia, as New Zealand poet laureate and Kohi swimmer, What You Made of It takes us deep inside the mind and experience of one of our major writers - and all in Stead's famously lucid 'story-telling' prose.
'This third volume turns out to be as full of incident, interest and incendiaries as its predecessors. It covers years when Stead found himself off-side with feminists, with Maori, and with his own tribe of left-leaning Pakeha literary intelligentsia. He has good stories still to tell and there will be a high level of public interest in how the older writer looks back on the embattled 1980s, '90s, and the various controversies in which he was embroiled.' --Alex Calder
C. K. Stead is a distinguished, award-winning novelist, literary critic, poet, essayist and Emeritus Professor of English at the University of Auckland. He was the New Zealand Poet Laureate from 2015-2017, has won the Prime Minister's Award for Fiction and is a Member of the Order of New Zealand, the highest honour possible in New Zealand.