New Zealand Writers



PATTRICK, Jenny

Best-selling author of historical novels

PATTRICK, Jenny (1936- ) is a writer and jeweller.

Jenny Pattrick was born and raised in Wellington. She trained and worked as a teacher before becoming a mother in 1963. In 1969 Pattrick began her career as a jeweller. Her work has been exhibited in New Zealand and internationally, and featured on the book jacket of her second novel, Heart of Coal (Black Swan, 2004).

Pattrick has written intermittently since 1959, but has been a full-time writer since 1993. She has written fiction for print and radio. With her musician husband, Laughton Pattrick, she has written several songs and musical shows for children.

Her songbooks include Songs for Seasons (Seaview Press, 2000), On our Street (Seaview, 2001) and The Farm at the End of the Road (Seaview, 2002).

Today, Pattrick is best-known as a historical novelist. Her first novel, The Denniston Rose (Black Swan, 2003) and its sequel, Heart of Coal (Black Swan, 2004) are two of New Zealand’s biggest-selling novels. They are set on an isolated coal-mining plateau, Denniston, once the primary coal producer for New Zealand, now a ghost town. The Illustrated Denniston Rose and Heart of Coal (2006) contain full text plus over 200 photographs and other images, both archival and contemporary, illustrating places and events described in the novels.

Reviewer Mike Crean of The Christchurch Press in 2003 said that ‘Pattrick writes with the assuredness of a veteran. She creates an authentic stage for a cast of characters who interact in ways that always ring true’.

In 2005 Pattrick published Catching the Current (Black Swan). Her huge success is no doubt due to her ability to write accessible historical fiction that reviewer Nicola Salmond describes as ‘a romping good yarn’. A spin-off from the Denniston novels, following the lives of Enok/Conrad, a Faroese song-maker who immigrates to New Zealand, and of Anahuia, half-Maori half-Scandinavian. War, land, and belonging are themes.

Pattrick has long been active in the arts community and has served as President of the Crafts Council. She has chaired the Arts Council and has served on the boards of Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School, the New Zealand School of Dance and the New Zealand Festival of the Arts’ New Zealand Post Writers and Readers Committee.

Jenny Pattrick lives in Wellington.

(LK)

Updated information

In Touch with Grace (Random House, 2006)
A contemporary novel, in prose and letters, about Grace, an independent octogenarian,  her love affair with Max and the various complications his family bring into her life. The elderly members of the bowls club always have an opinion.

Pattrick's latest novel, Landings (Black Swan, 2008), is set on the Whanganui River at the turn of the twentieth century.

 



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