Barbara Helen ElseMNZM (born 1947),[1] also known as Barbara Neale, is a New Zealand writer, editor, and playwright. She has written novels for adults and children, plays, short stories and articles and has edited anthologies of children's stories. She has received a number of awards and fellowships including the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to literature, the Storylines Margaret Mahy Medal and the Victoria University of Wellington's Writer's Fellowship.
She graduated with an MA from Otago University in 1969[2] and has worked as a university tutor, an editor and a freelance writer.[5] She has served on the New Zealand Book Council and on the National Council of the New Zealand Society of Authors (PEN NZ Inc). Barbara Else and her husband, Chris Else, were instrumental in setting up both the New Zealand Association of Literary Agents (NZALA)[6] and the New Zealand Association of Manuscript Assessors (NZAMA) [7][8]
As of 2018[update], Else lives in Dunedin, having stayed there after her residency in 2016.[4] She works as a literary agent and manuscript assessor with Chris Else[9] who is also a writer, as is her daughter Emma Neale.[10]
Awards and residencies
Else's books have won or been shortlisted for a number of awards and several of her children's books have been named as Storylines Notable Books.[11] Her first novel The Warrior Queen was shortlisted for the Montana New Zealand Book Awards. Her next title, Gingerbread Husbands, was shortlisted for the Booksellers BookData Award. The Travelling Restaurant (the first in her fantasy quartet for children, Tales of Fontania) won the 2012 Junior Fiction Honour Award in the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards, the Esther Glen Medal in the 2012 LIANZA Awards and a White Raven Award and was named as a 2012 IBBY NZ Honour Book for Writing.[9]
In 1998, Else was the NZ/Australia Exchange Writer (Brisbane Writers’ Festival, Sydney Spring Festival).[citation needed] Else was a visiting writer at Vancouver International Writers' Festival and the Winnipeg International Writers' Festival.[2] She was Writer in Residence at Victoria University of Wellington in 1999.[8] In 2004, she was awarded a Creative New Zealand Scholarship in Letters and in 2005, she became a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) for Services to Literature.[8][12]
In 2016, Else went to Dunedin as the University of Otago College of Education / Creative New Zealand Children's Writer in Residence, a move that led to her moving permanently to that city.[13] In the same year, she was awarded the Storylines Margaret Mahy Medal and Lecture Award.[14] She delivered the Storylines Margaret Mahy Medal Lecture, titled "Making it up as I go along, or Finding the Cornerstones of Creativity", on 3 April 2016.[15][16] She also delivered the Margaret Mahy Memorial Lecture at the WORD Christchurch Writers & Readers Festival in 2018.[17] In 2019 she was presented with the Ignition Festival Award[18] for outstanding contribution to children's literature.
Bibliography
As author
The Warrior Queen (Godwit Publishing, 1995)
Gingerbread Husbands (Godwit Publishing, 1997)
Skitterfoot Leaper (HarperCollins NZ, 1997)
Eating Peacocks (Random House; Vintage, 1998)
Tricky Situations (Random House, 1999)
Three Pretty Widows (Random House; Vintage, 2000)
The Case of the Missing Kitchen (Random House; Vintage 2003)
^"The Queen's Birthday Honours List 2005". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet: Te Tari o te Pirimia me te Komiti Matua. 6 June 2005. Retrieved 23 October 2018.