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The Stories of Eileen Duggan

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title The Stories of Eileen Duggan
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Eileen Duggan
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:342
Category/GenreClassic fiction (pre c 1945)
ISBN/Barcode 9781776562855
ClassificationsDewey:NZ823.2
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Te Herenga Waka University Press
Imprint Victoria University Press
Publication Date 8 August 2019
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

The Stories of Eileen Duggan presents the two collections of short stories Eileen Duggan wrote but did not offer for publication, and includes a Preface by the editor, Helen J. O'Neill, and a substantial introduction by John Weir. Eileen Duggan was born in Tuamarina in 1894, the youngest of four daughters of Irish immigrant parents. Her first poems were published in the Tablet in 1917, and by the time of her second full collection in 1936 she was internationally celebrated as the best poet New Zealand had produced, published and widely reviewed in Ireland, Great Britain and the United States. At home, however, her work had little appeal to the modernist movement led by Curnow, Glover and Fairburn, and in her later years she supported herself as a journalist and wrote little poetry, before her death in Wellington in 1972. Published here for the first time, these stories are tantalising evidence of the fiction writer Eileen Duggan could have become if she had not devoted her primary creative energy to poetry, and are an important addition to the canon of New Zealand literature.

Author Biography

Eileen Duggan (1894-1972) was New Zealand's best known poet while she was writing and publishing - for many years her reputation outside New Zealand exceeded that of any other New Zealand poet - but today her work is largely out of print. Helen J. O'Neill (Sister Leonie) was born of Irish parents in Cromwell, New Zealand. She graduated from Christchurch Teacher's College in 1949 and entered the Sisters of Mercy as a novice in 1951. A secondary school teacher until 1973, she earned a BA in English in 1963. Her PhD thesis was published as Once Preferred, Now Peripheral: Poetry and Pedagogy: The Place of Poetry in the Teaching of English for Years 9, 10 and 11 Students in 2006.