Paula Morris: the Tyranny of Ideas

Published: June 23, 2020, 5 p.m.

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With ruthless wit and compelling insights gained as a writer and writing teacher, Paula Morris argues that the skilled use of language is a more powerful ally for writers than ideas or feelings. She draws on persuasive examples of technique grounded in human experience. 

Paula (Ng\\u0101ti Wai, Ng\\u0101ti Wh\\u0101tua) is an acclaimed novelist, memoirist, short story writer and creative writing teacher. An insightful and incisive interviewer, she has been the face of the 2020 Auckland Writers Festival and its COVID-19-mandated shift online.

She is a writer of powerful opinion pieces, and the author of the story collection Forbidden Cities (2008); the essay On Coming Home (2015); and seven novels, including Rangatira (2011), fiction winner at both the 2012 New Zealand Post Book Awards and Ng\\u0101 Kupu Ora M\\u0101ori Book Awards. Her most recent book is an essay and story collection, False River (2017).

Paula teaches creative writing at the University of Auckland and is the founder of the Academy of New Zealand Literature.

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