KEVIN IRELAND was born in 1933, in Mt Albert, Auckland, and now lives
just across the harbour in Devonport. Among his many and varied prose
publications are three novels (Blowing My Top, The Man
Who Never Lived and The Craymore Affair), a collection
of short stories (Sleeping with the Angels), an opera libretto
(The Snow Queen, published by the BBC and translated into French)
and a book on the New Zealand novel (The New Zealand Collection).
His life has been described in two memoirs, Under the Bridge &
Over the Moon (1998) and Backwards to Forwards (2002),
the first of which won the Montana prize for History and Biography.
He has also received a National Book Award for Poetry, a Scholarship
in Letters, the 1990 Commemoration Medal, and an OBE for “services
to literature”. In 2000 he was made a Doctor of Literature by
Massey University. He has been awarded fellowships by Canterbury University,
the Sargeson Trust and Auckland University, and he is a former National
President of PEN, and is a member, and former Vice-president, of the
Sargeson Trust. He is also a Vice-president of the North Shore Cricket
Club, as well as Patron of its associated Torpedo Bay Indoor Bowling
Club.
He has regularly published poems in magazines, anthologies and translations
into many languages, and over the past 40 years he has produced 15 books
of poems, the last four of which have been published by Hazard Press:
Face to Face, Educating the Body, A Letter from
Amsterdam, Orchids Hummingbirds and Other Poems, A
Grammar of Dreams, Literary Cartoons, The Dangers
of Art, Practice Night in the Drill Hall, The Year
of the Comet, Selected Poems, Tiberius at the Beehive,
Skinning a Fish, Anzac Day: Selected Poems, Fourteen
Reasons for Writing and Walking the Land.
Ireland comments: ‘ “Sailing the world” is an enclosed
and domestic poem that considers a lifetime and travels a world.’
Poem: Sailing the world