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McQueen, Harvey

IN BRIEF

Harvey McQueen published poetry, anthologies, and memoir. He wrote several collections of poetry, and edited anthologies lauded for their originality. His own poetry is known to be ‘meditative or conversational,’ and focuses on ‘relationships, family, love, work, politics, office life, domestic concerns like gardening or cats, music and reading’. McQueen’s memoir, The Ninth Floor (1991), comments on the educational and political history of the mid-to-late 1980’s. He was made an Officer of the New Zealand order of Merit for services to education and literature in 2002.


FROM THE oxford companion TO new zealand literature

McQueen, Harvey (1934– ), is an anthologist, poet, memoirist and educational writer. Born in Little River, Banks Peninsula, and educated at Canterbury University College and Christchurch Teachers’ College, he was a secondary-school teacher and inspector, then curriculum officer and manager in the Department of Education, resigning in 1986 to freelance as a writer and educational consultant. He was appointed personal educational adviser to David Lange, then Minister of Education as well as Prime Minister, during the crucial reforms of ‘Tomorrow’s Schools’. McQueen’s memoir of that time, The Ninth Floor (1991), provides an informed commentary on the educational and political history, while his sympathetic treatment of Lange gives a narrative undertow close to tragedy.

He has shown a flair for anthologies that are both innovative and judicious. Ten Modern New Zealand Poets (ed. with Lois Cox, 1974), modestly aimed at schools, gave a central place (only a year after The *Young New Zealand Poets) to the generation of Sam Hunt, Bill Manhire and Hone Tuwhare, and the Penguin Book of New Zealand Verse (ed. with Ian Wedde, 1985) was the first to juxtapose the poetic traditions of the Mäori and English languages. McQueen’s eclectic taste was further evidenced by the Penguin Book of Contemporary New Zealand Poetry (ed. with Ian Wedde and Miriama Evans, 1989) and The New Place: The Poetry of Settlement in New Zealand 1852–1914 (1993). This treated New Zealand’s Victorian poets with discriminating seriousness for the first time for more than half a century.

McQueen’s own poetry is mostly meditative or conversational, giving engaging expression to the mental life of a contemporary educated New Zealand male. Poems range over relationships, family, love, work, politics, office life, domestic concerns like gardening or cats, music and reading, with a sensitivity that is never merely fashionable and a commitment to the significance of private thought that is never pretentious. The wry humour, observation of small-scale detail and natural recurrence of reference to New Zealand’s fauna and flora are all pleasures. His volumes are Against the Maelstrom (1981), Stoat Spring (1983), Oasis Motel (1986) and the exquisitely produced Room (Black Robin, 1988). McQueen was president of PEN (NZ) in 1987, guiding the momentous shift of headquarters from Wellington to Auckland. Until 1997 executive director of the New Zealand Council for Teacher Education, he edited the provocatively titled Education is Change: 20 Viewpoints (1994).

RR



Author entry from The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature,
edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (1998).
 

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Additional Information

In recognition of McQueen’s long career he was awarded the ONZM for services to education and literature in 2002.

He published Pingandy: New and Selected Poems (1999), Recessional & Other Poems (2004) and A Question of Shoe Size: The Campaign for Pay Parity for Primary Teachers 1994-1998 (2001) with Anne Else.

This Piece of Earth: A Life In My New Zealand Garden (Awa Press, 2004) is a memoir - from a Banks Peninsula boyhood to the Beehive - Harvey McQueen interweaves his lifes journey with the seasons of his Wellington garden and mouth-watering recipes from his kitchen.

'I loved every minute of this book - a gorgeous read,' Fiona Kidman.

McQueen had a poem included in Shards of Silver (Steele Roberts, 2006), a book investigating the interplay between photography and poetry.

The Earth's Deep Breathing: Garden Poems by New Zealand Poets
(2007) was edited by Harvey McQueen and published by Godwit. Ian Sharp wrote in his review of the anthology, 'This Piece of Earth, Harvey McQueen's 2004 memoir centered on his gardening experiences, was a book of rare charm. He has long been one of the country's most astute anthologists too. It was probably inevitable that he would eventually compile a collection of New Zealand gardening poems. ' He continues, 'what really makes this anthology a winner is the range of voices, moods and attitudes that McQueen encompasses.'

He was editor of These I Have Loved: My Favourite New Zealand Poems, 2010.

Harvey McQueen died on Christmas Day, 2010 after a long illness.

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Phone 0064 4 801 5546
Level 4, Stephenson & Turner House, 156 Victoria St, Te Aro
Wellington 6011, New Zealand