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Published by Bridget Williams Books, New Zealand, 2002
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: BooksNZ, Palmerston North, New Zealand
Book First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Fine. First Edition. 178 pages.
Published by Bridget Williams Books, Wellington, 2002
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: Mainly Fiction, Auckland, New Zealand
Book
Soft cover. Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. A near fine copy with just a small name in front.
Published by Bridget Williams Books, 2002
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: Book Haven, Wellington, WLG, New Zealand
Book
Paperback. Condition: Good. 178 pages.
Published by Bridget Williams Books, 2002
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: Book Haven, Wellington, WLG, New Zealand
Book Signed
Paperback. Condition: Good. W. H. Oliver, a writer, editor, professor, and central figure in New Zealand's intellectual landscape, reflects here on the decades of his own life and the history that has shaped him. A warm portrait is painted of his Cornish parents, whose experiences with immigration, rural work, the depression, and Labour activism are recounted. Oliver shares how he avidly absorbed education and progressed from rural schools to Oxford University. This wide-ranging account tells of ancestry and early childhood, the influences of feminism, friendship, marriage, and family, while acknowledging the broader scope of history and the development of New Zealand. This is a poet writing about history, and an historian writing autobiography-perceptive, wry, and sometimes painfully honest. Signed by author and with separate inscription by author. 178 pages.
Published by Bridget Williams Books, 2004
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: Jason Books, Auckland, AUCKL, New Zealand
Book
Paperback. Finalist - 2003 Montana NZ Book Awards, Biography section. W H. Oliver, a central figure in New Zealand's intellectual landscape, reflects here on the decades of his own life, and the history that has shaped him. A warm portrait of his Cornish parents tells of immigration, rural work, the depression, and Labour activism. Reading and ideas were important to these 'people of the word', and their youngest son avidly absorbed the education offered, from rural schools to Oxford University. In time he became one of New Zealand's pre-eminent scholars, a man who was to make, as writer, teacher and editor, a particular contribution to New Zealand history. Three major publications are cornerstones in this life: The Story of New Zealand (1960), The Oxford History of New Zealand (editor, 1981) and The Dictionary of New Zealand Biography (first general editor, 1990). He was the author as well of James K. Baxter: A Portrait (1983), a history of the East Coast, and some volumes of poetry. Recent work on Treaty claims has led to writing on issues raised by the claims process. Looking for the Phoenix is a wide ranging account: ancestry and early childhood, the influences of feminism, friendship, marriage and family all connect to the more public story. Here Bill Oliver explores, contributes to, and challenges some of the formative ideas of his time. This is a poet writing about history, and an historian writing autobiography: perceptive, wry, and sometimes painfully honest.
Published by Bridget Williams Books, 2004
ISBN 10: 1877242985ISBN 13: 9781877242984
Seller: Jason Books, Auckland, AUCKL, New Zealand
Book First Edition
Paperback. 1st Edition.