James McNeish
Sir James Henry Peter McNeish was a New Zealand novelist, playwright and biographer.
Biography
McNeish attended Auckland Grammar School and graduated from Auckland University College with a degree in languages. He travelled the world as a young man, working as a deckhand on a Norwegian freighter in 1958, and recording folk music in 21 countries. He worked in the Theatre Workshop in London with Joan Littlewood, and was influenced by her spirit of socially-committed drama. He worked as a freelance programme and documentary maker for the BBC Radio's Features Department in the 1960s. He also wrote for The Guardian and The Observer. He spent three years in Sicily with Danilo Dolci, the non-violent anti-Mafia reformer, and wrote Fire under the Ashes a biographical account of Dolci's life which is remarkable for its objectivity and clarity. He wrote some 25 books.McNeish's writing has been the subject of critical acclaim both at home and abroad. Besides New Zealand, his books are set in Sicily, London, Israel and New Caledonia. He was described as "prolific" by the Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature. His book Lovelock was nominated for the 1986 Booker Prize.
In 1999, McNeish was awarded the prestigious National Library of New Zealand Research Fellowship, allowing him to research the lives and friendships of five prominent New Zealanders who attended Oxford University in the 1930s—four of them Rhodes Scholars: James Bertram, Geoffrey Cox, Dan Davin, Ian Milner and John Mulgan. This multi-biography was published under the title The Dance of the Peacocks: New Zealanders in exile in the time of Hitler and Mao Tse Tung. In the same vein, The Sixth Man is a biography of another gifted New Zealander, Paddy Costello, who studied at Cambridge University during the same period and whose subsequent career in the Foreign Office was marred by controversy.
In 2010, McNeish was honoured with the Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in Non-Fiction. His intention was to donate part of his prize towards a travel scholarship—'a hardship scheme'—for young writers.
It was said about McNeish that among New Zealand novelists, he was the 'wild card'. In an interview with Philip Matthews in 2010, he said: "I've always been an outsider, and I'm quite comfortable with that. To retain your critical sense in a small society like New Zealand, you have to stand apart".
In the 2011 New Year Honours, McNeish was appointed as Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to literature.
McNeish lived in Wellington, New Zealand, with his wife Helen, Lady McNeish. He died on 11 November 2016, aged 85, several days after submitting his final manuscript, Breaking Ranks, to HarperCollins for publication in April 2017.
Awards
- Recipient of the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship, France, 1973
- Writer in Residence, Berlin Kuenstler Program, 1983
- National Library of New Zealand Research Fellow, 1999
- Berlin Writers' Residency 2009 funded by Creative New Zealand, the national agency for the development of the arts in New Zealand.
- Recipient of the 2010 Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement in non-fiction.
- Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, 31 December 2010 New Year Honours.
- President of Honour of the New Zealand Society of Authors, 2012–2013
Major works
- Mackenzie
- The Mackenzie Affair
- The Glass Zoo
- Joy
- Lovelock
- Penelope's Island
- My Name Is Paradiso
- Mr Halliday & the Circus Master
- The Crime of Huey Dunstan
- Tavern in the Town
- Fire Under the Ashes: A Life of Danilo Dolci
- Larks in a Paradise
- As for the Godwits
- Art of the Pacific
- Belonging: Conversations in Israel
- Walking on my Feet: A Life of A.R.D. Fairburn
- Ahnungslos in Berlin: A Berlin Diary
- The Man from Nowhere & Other Prose
- The Mask of Sanity: The Bain Murders
- An Albatross Too Many
- Dance of the Peacocks: New Zealanders in exile in the time of Hitler and Mao Tse-tung,
- The Sixth Man: the extraordinary life of Paddy Costello
- Touchstones – Memories of people and place
- Seelenbinder: the Olympian who defied Hitler
- The Mouse Man
- Eighteen Ninety-Five
- The Rocking Cave
- Thursday Bloody Thursday
Articles, reviews and essays
- Not so far from Godwit Bay, In From a Room of their Own, A Celebration of the Katherine Mansfield Fellowship, Auckland, Whitcoulls,
- A visit to Denis Glover, Quote Unquote 17–19
- Ambush aftermath in New Caledonia, The Press 18
- Did Ulysses just sail round Sicily? The Dominion 8
- Mulgan's War, The Listener 38
- Paper exodus sends our literary heritage abroad, The Dominion Sunday Times 9–20
- Paper exodus sends our literary heritage abroad, Archifacts 77–91
- Patric's Day The Listener
- Walking on my feet: A. R. D. Fairburn : a kind of biography. Auckland, Collins 1983, New Outlook Dec 1983/Jan 1984 Dec/Jan 37
- The Greek Experience: a conversation with David Kennedy, Art New Zealand 36 50–53
- Murder in Bainville: an open letter to Graeme Lay, Quote Unquote 25 July 16–17
- A war of nerves, The Listener 118.2486 16–19
- Breaking the silence, The Listener 146.2850 20–25
- Case closed : how and why David Bain killed his family, The Listener 18
- Lovelock's dream mile, The Listener 145.2839 24–25
- The Ends of Empire : Part 1, The Listener 115.2448 11–15
- The Ends of Empire : Part 2, The Listener 115.2449 10–13
- The Grand Old Hotels of Thermal-land, Meanjin Quarterly 47 May 144–148
North and South Dec 119–123
Walking on My Feet : A. R. D. Fairburn, 1904–1957 : a Kind of Biography. Auckland: Collins, 1983
- Who will guard the peace? The Listener ang2057 124.2571 12–15
- Landfall 37 June 218–220
- New Outlook Autumn 35
- New Zealand Runner 49 April 16
- Affairs 91 Mar. Quote Unquote 22 April 30–31
- Quote Unquote 41 Nov 30
- North and South 128 Nov 140–142
- New Zealand Books 7.1 Mar 10–11
- Quote Unquote 24 June 26
- Metro 169 July 117–119
- Landfall 190 Spring 360–362
- New Zealand Books 5.5 Dec 9-11
- Metro 113 Nov 180–182
- New & Notable 7.5 Nov 5
- Best Sellers 36 Sept 184-184
- Landfall 30 Sept 208–211
- Islands 5.1 Sept 100–102
Profile
- Last of the fighting brigadiers,New Zealand Herald 2-2
- Last of the fighting brigadiers,The Press 12
- Last of the fighting brigadiers,The Dominion 11
- The man between the rivers, Otago Daily Times 21
- New Zealand Geographic 8 Oct/Dec 18–41
- The man who made social medicine work The Listener April 20–21
- Review The Listener 1565 Oct 20
- The Dominion Oct 16
- Quote Unquote 38 Aug 30