Stevan Eldred-Grigg
Stevan Treleaven Eldred-Grigg (born 1952) is the New Zealand author of nine novels, eight history books and various essays and short stories.
Writings
Initially a writer of short stories, the first three non-fiction works published by Eldred-Grigg were A Southern Gentry, a history of landowning families in the southern provinces of New Zealand, A New History of Canterbury, a social history of the province, and Pleasures of the Flesh, a book about sexuality and drugs in colonial New Zealand.
In 1987 he published his first novel, Oracles and Miracles, the story of two sisters growing up in Christchurch before and during World War II. Since then he has written several fiction and non-fiction books. Kaput! focuses on Europe and portrays an ordinary housewife struggling to deal with day-to-day life in wartime Berlin during the period of the Third Reich in Germany. His novel Gardens of Fire (1993, ISBN 0-14-023256-7) is based on research and interviews with survivors of Ballantyne's fire that engulfed Ballantynes department store in central Christchurch in 1947.
Eldred-Grigg was the first living New Zealand writer of literary fiction to have had a novel translated into Chinese when Oracles and Miracles, was published in Shanghai in 2002 under the title ‘剩’贤奇迹.[1]
Eldred-Grigg has lived in Mexico City, Iowa City, Berlin and Shanghai. He is currently based in Beijing and Wellington. His three most recent books are Diggers, Hatters & Whores, a history of gold rushes in New Zealand; The Great Wrong War, a history of New Zealand during World War I; and People, People, People (2011, ISBN 978-1-86953-813-2), a very brief history of New Zealand from 1200 to 2000.[2]
References
- "Chinese Edition of New Zealand's First Contemporary Novel Released in China". People's Daily. 2002-08-05. Retrieved 2006-12-30.
- "CLL Writer's Awards". New Zealand Book Council. 2006-12-14. Archived from the original on 2007-03-20. Retrieved 2006-12-30.
- Biography on the New Zealand Book Council site
- Personal website
- 1952 births
- New Zealand short story writers
- New Zealand male novelists
- Living people
- New Zealand historians
- University of Canterbury alumni
- Australian National University alumni
- People from the West Coast, New Zealand
- New Zealand people of Cornish descent
- People educated at Shirley Boys' High School
- 20th-century New Zealand novelists
- 21st-century New Zealand novelists
- Male short story writers
- International Writing Program alumni