“He mea pai ki a au te tuhi i te pukapuka rā, ehara i te mea uaua. Nā te mea i te mōhio mātou ki ngā kōrero. He kōrero i rongo mātou i a mātou e tamariki ana i ō mātou kaumātua, koroua, kuia e taki kōrero ana mō Ōrākau.”
“It was a pleasure for me to write the book; it wasn’t difficult because we know the stories. These are stories told to us while we were children by our elders. They would recite these stories about Ōrākau.”
Temara is the first recipient of the Te Murau o te Tuhi award, and he says it’s an amazing idea that celebrates Māori history books in te reo Māori.
Kua koa taku ngākau nā te mea, i whakatau rātou, kia whakanuia te reo Māori, ka mutu, ko au tā rātou i whakatau ai, hei whakawhiwhi mā rātou i te tohu whakamana i te reo Māori.
“I’m very pleased that they decided to celebrate the Māori language, and for them to decide that the te reo Māori award should be given to me.”
Other winners include internationally acclaimed Emily Perkins, who won the $65,000 Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction for her book Lioness – a novel exploring wealth, class and female mid-life reckoning.
Perkins received the award ahead of Booker-Prize-winning author and screenwriter Eleanor Catton (Birnam Wood), Pip Adam (Audition), and Stephen Daisley (A Better Place). Adam and Daisley are both previous winners of the Acorn Prize for Fiction.