William Direen
William Direen is a New Zealand writer and performer. His novels use a range of narrative techniques and are concerned with u/dys-topias, belief structures and questions of survival. He lives in Dunedin, New Zealand, where he edits the literary magazine Percutio . For his work with musicians see Builders.
Recent works
- Christchurch, Canal City, futuristic utopian vision of a Christchurch preserving historical suburban identities, with elevated trains, networks of canals and a unique approach to organising society. Published in Percutio 2014, Nr. 8.
- The Book of Flanagan a semi-mythical history of Christchurch from creation of the region by a 'fictitious' god called Thong, pre-history, flora and fauna, arrival of humans, up until recent events. Edition of one. Handwritten in capitals, in a self-made booklet, exhibited at Christchurch Art Gallery as part of larger exhibition (containing many booklets filled by guests), brainchild of artist Scott Flanagan, 2011.
- Onaevia (E-book of 2002 fable, containing mythology and appendices of an imaginary people, 2015).
- The Ballad of Rue Belliard (Novel, The Writers Group, 2013). Author name, Guillaume Direen. An experimental romance set within a community on the outer perimeter of Paris. Entire issue of ISSN 1175-9313 #48.
- Versions Translations (Poetry, Kilmog Press, 2014). Responses to a range of European language poems.
- Utopia Rag (Novel, Tank Press, 2014). Reissue of the road novel of 2002, set in the South Island of New Zealand.
- Wormwood (Novel, Titus Books, 2012). Limited reissue of the 1997 experimental novel set in Berlin. Sold at readings and performances only.
- Tourtagebuch (Diary, Titus Books, 2012). ISBN 979-10-91280-00-6. German translation by Arno Loeffler of Direen's 1994 personal diary of a European performance tour.
- Fallen to a Field. Poem in five parts recorded in collaboration with NZ pianist Jonathan Crayford at NZ Embassy in Paris. 30 mins. Broadcast by Radio New Zealand Concert, 10 July 2012.
- Dunedin Poems (Kilmog Press, 2011). ISBN 978-0-9864665-5-7
- Radio Play for a Defunct Station, chapbook (available with performance at Depot Artspace, Devonport. 2010.
- Devonport, A Diary Diary impressions of Devonport, Auckland, during tenure of the University of Auckland Fellowship at the Michael King Writers Centre in 2010. (Signalmans House Series Nº.1, Holloway Press, University of Auckland, 2011) ISBN 978-0-9864618-0-4
- L. A novella, set in New Zealand in the midst of guerrilla warfare between two economic factions; the world has been reshaped after geological upheavals. Published in an anthology of NZ speculative fiction writers A Foreign Country. (Random Static. Anna Caro & Juliet Buchanan, editors). 2010. ISBN 978-0-473-16916-9
- Enclosures (Novel, Titus Books, 2008) Transgeneric novel in five parts including Jonah (at Kapiti), The Stadium (history of a people confined to a biosphere), and autobiographical content. ISBN 978-1-877441-06-6
- Song of the Brakeman (Novel, 2006). Apocalyptic vision of a future South Pacific. Science fiction novel. (Titus Books) ISBN 0-9582586-7-8
- Jules (Novel, 2003). 24 hours in the life of a Parisian art teacher, who is hallucinating characters from the paintings he researches. (Alpha Books) ISBN 0958326649 / 9780958326643
- Onaevia (Fable, 2002). History and mythology of an imaginary land. (Alpha Books) ISBN 0-9583266-0-6
- Editor Percutio, ISSN 1953-1427, a trans-cultural literary annual (poetry, fiction extracts, translations & versions, essays, reviews and history). 2006, -07, -08, -09, -10, -11, -12, -13, -14, -15. Guest Editor of Landfall #219 'On Music'. ISBN (of #219 only) 978-1-877372 98-8; brief #36 and #42 (ISSN 1175-9313).
Critical responses
- Early theatre work (1981–87): "hard driving rhythms and surreal imagery".[1]
- James K. Baxter’s Three Mimes "receive[d] intelligent and effective treatment".[2]
- To Bitumen (play) "an evocative memory piece… strong on physical sensations".[3]
- To Fowkes Alive (music-theatre): "a struggle against primeval and futuristic obstacles",[4] "a gentle ‘musical delirium’ which raises smiles rather than laughter",[5] "the surrealistic tale of a ‘petrolhead’ whose life flashes before his eyes the moment that he dies in a violent accident"[6]
- To Dial a Claw (music-theatre): "a living experiment in alternative staging";[7]
- To Raoul (song cycle): "an exploration of exploitation",[8] a story told "from its beginnings in the wastelands of kiwi suburbia to its chilly… conclusion.".[9]
- To Wormwood: "Entropy and death read as metaphors for the implosion of post-war Europe and the failure of capitalism.".[10]
- To Nusquama: "A well-written often humorous paradigm for the 21st century".[11]
- To The Impossible: "Direen’s heightened ear for absurdity serves this collection well"[12]
- To Jules: "Romantic stereotypes collide noisily with modern realities and growing older means a confused prostate and even more complexing emotions. Jules is the story of a man at life’s pivotal point.".[13] "It's a delightful book, but it's a book to read as series of literary compositions."[14] Jules was also described as "an indolent digression through European culture, art and Paris."[15]
- To the novellas: "a quick and devastating appearance"[16]
- To Song of the Brakeman: "a vividly conceived world here, manifesting slowly and brilliantly through its accumulating signs"[17]
- To Versions Translations: "the dark-tinted heart of the night, in the dense heart of the shade and very centre of the wind." Jacques Coulardeau imaginative critique, 2014.
- To Versions Translations: "uses lovely – what I think of as reverse or encapsulating – cadences." Jan Kemp criticism, 2014.
References
- ↑ Lisa Warrington, NZ Books, October 2003
- ↑ John Farnsworth, Christchurch Press, 16 November 1984
- ↑ Lisa Warrington, NZ Books, October 2003
- ↑ Jane Bowron, Dominion, June 1989
- ↑ Laurie Atkinson, Evening Post, June 1989
- ↑ Neil Hickman, Music New Zealand, 1991
- ↑ Mark Gobbi, March 1991, City Voice
- ↑ Direen turns stage-show into mini rock-opera, Evening Post, Wednesday 10 March 1993
- ↑ Bernadette Rae, NZ Herald, 25 July 1992
- ↑ Virginia Were, NZ Listener, 23 June 1997
- ↑ Anna Chinn, NZ Listener, December 2002
- ↑ Kate Belgrave, Listener, 25 May 2002.
- ↑ Christopher Moore, The Press, Christchurch, 27 March 2004
- ↑ David Hill reviewing Jules on 10 December 2004. Radio New Zealand, National Programme.
- ↑ Norman Bilbrough, Listener, May 2004.
- ↑ Kapka Kassabova, Listener 16 January 1999.
- ↑ Jen Crawford, Landfall 214, November 2007.
External links
- Percutio magazine editor info
- Writer Profile on New Zealand Book Council website
- Creative NZ residency
- Personal website
- Dynamite Hemorrhage interview
- AudioCulture profile
- Auckland University English Drama and Writing Studies Department
- briefliterary magazine (The Writers Group, publisher).
- Devonport, A Diary Holloway Press (publisher)
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