New Zealand Writers













DUDER, Tessa
Strong central female characters, an identifiably New Zealand setting, convincing New Zealand English dialogue and a strongly dramatic plot.
KAPAI: Kids read about Tessa here
Writers in Schools: Ross Kinnaird’s involvement
Author entry from The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (1998). [About the Companion entries]
DUDER, Tessa (1940– ), writer for children and young adults, was educated at Diocesan GHS and Auckland University. As Tessa Stavely, she was a silver medallist in swimming at the 1958 Cardiff Empire Games (later the Commonwealth Games), national butterfly and medley record holder (1958–59) and the first New Zealand Swimmer of the Year (1959). In 1959 she was appointed a general reporter at the Auckland Star, and later deputy editor of the Women’s Page.
In 1964 she married and moved to London, working for two years as a feature writer for the Daily Express; she moved to Pakistan 1966–70, and returned to New Zealand in 1971, apart from spending 1981 in Malaysia. She lives in Auckland. Her first novel for children, Night Race to Kawau (1982), depicts a family’s triumph over adversity when the father, an experienced sailor, is knocked unconscious at the beginning of the race, leaving the mother and three children, all experienced but untested sailors, to crew the boat. The novel bears many of the hallmarks of Duder’s later work, with strong central female characters, an identifiably New Zealand setting, convincing New Zealand English dialogue and a strongly dramatic plot.
Her next novel, Jellybean (1985), explores the changing relationship between Geraldine (the Jellybean of the title) and her single-parent mother, a cellist, as the mother engages in a relationship with a fellow musician and Jellybean decides she wants to become a conductor. Duder was awarded the 1985 Choysa Bursary for Children’s Writers.
The quartet of Alex novels were all critically acclaimed. Alex won the 1988 Children’s Book of the Year Award and the 1989 Esther Glen Medal; Alex in Winter the 1990 Aim Children’s Book of the Year Award and the Esther Glen Medal; Alessandra—Alex in Rome was placed third in the Senior Fiction section of the 1992 Aim Award and won the Esther Glen Medal; Songs for Alex won the 1993 Aim Award. The quartet has been published in the USA, Britain and Australia, and translated into several languages.
Duder has subsequently diversified into script and play writing, short stories, non-fiction and acting. She has edited several anthologies, including Falling in Love (1995), and contributed regular columns and reviews locally and overseas. Duder is also notable for her role in the establishment and promotion of the New Zealand Children’s Book Foundation. She was awarded the OBE (1994) and the Margaret Mahy Medal (the Children’s Book Foundation’s recognition of distinction) in 1996. SSa
Updated information
The Tiggie Tompson Show won the Young Adult section of the 2000 New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards.The sequel is Tiggie Tompson All At Sea (2001). In this second book of the trilogy, Tiggie's parents are living in Brisbane while Tiggie boards with another family. While researching her role as Eliza in a 19th century drama for television, Tiggie finds herself increasingly caught up in Eliza's character. Then mysterious emails from her half-brother in Australia give Tiggie even more to think about in this story of conflicting demands and changing loyalties. Tiggie Tompson All at Sea was a finalist in the Senior Fiction category of the New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards 2002.
Tessa Duder is the editor of A Book of Pacific Lullabies, with illustrations by Anton Petrov (2001). This picture book contains 30 original and traditional lullabies from the southern Pacific.
The contributors include New Zealand writers Margaret Mahy, Patricia Grace, Michaelanne Forster, Barbara Else, Joy Cowley, Pacific Island writer Sia Figiel, well-known NZ hymn writers Professor Colin Gibson and Jocelyn Marshall, songwriter Hinewehi Mohi and Australians John Marsden and Wendy Orr.
Seduced by the Sea: More Stories from Seafaring Kiwis (2002) edited by Tessa Duder is a collection of fascinating and gripping sea stories from a selection of well-known New Zealanders, including Peter Blake and Sarah Mathew.
Tessa Duder was the 2003 recipient of the Meridian Energy Katherine Mansfield Memorial Fellowship.
Storylines: The Anthology (2003) edited by Tessa Duder celebrates ten years of the annual storylines festival of New Zealand children's writers, illustrators and storytellers.
The final installment in the Tiggie Tompson Trilogy, Tiggie Tompson's Longest Journey, charts the two journeys in Tiggie's life: her evolution as an actor in the role of Eliza Matthews on the popular television drama, The Longest Journey; and her own journey into womanhood.
Tiggie Tompson's Longest Journey was a finalist in the Young Adult Fiction section of the New Zealand Post Book Awards for Children & Young Adults 2004.
Tessa Duder was the 2005 recipient of the Gaelyn Gordon Award for a Much Loved Book for her first novel Night Race to Kawau.
Down to the Sea Again: True sea stories for young New Zealanders (HarperCollins, 2005), is a collection of 40 real-life stories about the sea for young readers. The writers she has selected come from all around New Zealand. Some have already published books while others are first-time writers. Every one of them has a fascinating story to tell.
Duder's book Margaret Mahy: A Writer's Life was published by HarperCollins Publishers in 2005. A collection of short stories, Too Close to the Wind (HarperCollins) was published in 2006. Duder also completed a fantasy children's picture book Carpet of Dreams ( Angus & Robertson, 2006) centering on a young girl and the bond between her and her grandmother. Carpet of Dreams was republished by HarperCollins Publishers in 2008.
Is She Still Alive? (HarperCollins Publishers, 2008) was inspired by Duder's time spent in France on the Katherine Mansfield scholarship. It is a collection of 13 short stories for adults on the theme of womanhood and the joys and despairs that this brings.
Tessa Duder is available to talk to students of all ages. She can discuss anything connected with books, writing and book adaptation for screen. She will talk to groups of up to three classes and she is able to run workshops. She is prepared to travel out of town for Writers in Schools.
KAPAI: KIDS AUTHORS PICTURES AND INFORMATION
Some Questions for Tessa Duder
Where do you live?
At Mission Bay in Auckland, very near a beach
What books do you like to read?
Novels, biographies, history and of course as many children's books as I have time for.
Who is your favourite author?
Margaret Mahy
How do you think up your ideas?
I don't - I spend a lot of time creating my characters and THEY get the ideas.
What is the best thing about being an author?
Meeting other writers and readers who like my books!
Some Questions for Primary Schools
Do you have a pet?
None, now, but when my children were growing up, a dog called Pippi, a cat called Liquorice, hens called Port and Starboard, ducks, mice and once, briefly, a seagull (he flew away the minute his broken wing was mended)
Do you have a favourite colour?
Turquoise.
A favourite food?
Scallops and oysters.
Do you have a favourite movie?
The Princess Bride.
Do you play any games?
Pictionary.
What is the best thing about being a writer?
Being able to make up stories and getting paid for it?
How do make your books?
I write the words; an editor makes them better and corrects my spelling; a printer works the machines that print my words onto paper and cuts the paper into shape and puts a cover around all the pieces; and then a bookseller sells them. So there are a lot of people involved.
Where do you like to go for your holiday?
To a beach on an island, or with friends on a yacht, or a bach by the sea.
What was the naughtiest thing you ever did at school?
Talk when I shouldn't have!
Some Questions for Secondary School Students
How did you get started?
A story grabbed me by the throat and wouldn't let go until I'd written it. That was Night Race to Kawau and it took four years from the first night until it got published. I've been writing every since.
Did anyone inspire you when you were getting started?
Dorothy Butler, a famous bookseller and author, who I asked for some feedback and gave me very wise advice. Margaret Mahy, for being Margaret and because I think she's one of the world's great children's writers.
What advice would you give to an aspiring writer?
DO lots of things - travel, listen, watch, study. be curious, take risks. Then you've got lots of experiences to write about. Oh - and write, anything, something every day - letters, e-mails, stories, magazine articles, anything that keeps you using words.
Is it difficult to make a living writing in New Zealand?
Except for a select few, YES. You have to be versatile and work hard, bringing out books regularly if you want to make enough money to live on -i.e. you have to treat it as your job, which it is, and not as something you do when you get the urge.
What were you like as a teenager?
Lively, bossy, busy, a leader, but I hope with enough sense of humour to keep me from being a complete pain in the butt. I loved all the opportunities I got at school - drama, singing, writing plays, producing a school mag, tennis, hockey etc. - and did quite well at class too. I was lucky that the school I went to was very strong in all those things (i.e. sport and the arts).




