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Rachael King
New Zealand writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Rachael King (born 1970) is an author from New Zealand.
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Background
King was born in 1970, in Hamilton, New Zealand. In 2001 she received a Master of Arts in creative writing from Victoria University of Wellington.[1]
King is a bass guitarist and has played with several bands on the Flying Nun label.[1][2]
King's father is the historian and author Michael King and her brother is filmmaker Jonathan King.[3]
Works
King has published five novels:
- The Sound of Butterflies (2006, Random House)
- Magpie Hall (2009, Random House)
- Red Rocks (2012, Random House), novel for children
- The Grimmelings (2024, Allen & Unwin)
- Violet and the Velvets, The Case of the Missing Stuff (Book 1) (2025, Allen & Unwin)
Short stories by King have been published in several anthologies including in Home: New Short Short Stories by New Zealand Writers[4] and Creative Juices.[5]
In 2013, King became Literary Director of the WORD Christchurch Writers and Readers Festival.[1][2] She was a judge for the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults in 2017.[6]
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Awards
In 2007, King's first novel The Sound of Butterflies won the NZSA Hubert Church Best First Book Award for Fiction at the Montana New Zealand Book Awards.[7]
Her novel for children, Red Rocks, was shortlisted for the Junior Fiction category in the 2013 New Zealand Post Children's Book Awards[8] and won the LIANZA Esther Glen Award.[9]
King was the 2008 Ursula Bethell Writer in Residence at the University of Canterbury.[10] She has also won the 2005 Lilian Ida Smith Award.[1]
The Case of the Missing Stuff was shortlisted for the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults, Wright Family Foundation Esther Glen Junior Fiction Award 2025.[11]
References
External links
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