New Zealand Writers
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TAYLOR, Chad
"Prose so cool, and images so compelling, it's film noir in novel form."
Author entry from The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (1998). About the Companion entries View list of Companion contributors
TAYLOR, Chad (1964– ), is a writer of uncompromisingly contemporary short fictions of transience and shifting realities in the modern city.Born and educated in Auckland, where his work is largely set, he graduated BFA at Elam and has carried that interest into the strong visual quality of his writing.
His stories have been published in Landfall, Metro and Sport and anthologised in Michael Gifkins’s Lust and elsewhere. Published volumes are Heaven (1994), Pack of Lies (1994), both novellas, and The Man Who Wasn’t Feeling Himself, short stories (1995).
The fictions often work on the edge of such conventions as the murder story (‘No Sun, No Rain’), futuristic fantasy (‘Somewhere in the 21st Century’) or romance triangle (Pack of Lies, ‘Calling Doctor Dollywell’), often through unreliable or unattractive narrators.
As these literary norms are subverted, perceptions of reality and identity are challenged. Strong visual representations, especially of sex and clothing, and filmic treatment with fragmentary and mobile scenes and chronology, provide metaphorical access to these internal concerns.
Taylor has written for film, including the script ‘Funny Little Guy’ (1994). A full-time writer, he lives in Auckland.
RR
Comments on Companion entry
Heaven is a novel, not a novella. (Information from author.)Updated Information
Chad Taylor was awarded a Buddle Findlay Sargeson Fellowship in 2001.Shirker was published by Canongate in 2000. "Ambitious, and weaving a seductive web of existential anomie, is Chad Taylor's Shirker, a fascinating and obsessive novel... Ellerslie Penrose, a part-time futures broker, finds a junkie's body in an Auckland dumpster, steals his wallet and embarks on a hallucinatory journey into the shadow life of the dead man. This brings him into contact with fantasy bordellos, mysterious manuscripts, bizarre antiques dealers, and a sleazy nest of quirky happenstance. Oddly detached from its subject matter, this is as hypnotic as they come." The Guardian (UK).
"Imagine Raymond Chandler filing from New Zealand with a little help from Anne Rice and Jean-Paul Sartre, and you're still not close to imagining the oddity of this weird, wonderful novel." Rebecca Ascher-Walsh, Entertainment Weekly (US).
Set in Auckland, Electric (2003), is about Samuel Usher, a data-retrieval specialist who drinks too much, takes too many drugs and is rapidly reaching the end of his line. By chance he meets Candy and Jules, two mathematicians, then just as suddenly they are gone and Sam is left with with a strange list of numbers and three words: ANYWAY FREEDOM GOODBYE.
"Electric unveils the disturbing supremacy of digital technology and the equally disturbing infiltration of illicit drugs into everyday society, all within the darkened landscape of a broken metropolis. For Taylor, it's all about the dissolution of personal identity and the crushing anomie of post-modern society, each becoming more unhinged the longer the power remains off." Wendy Cavenett HQ.
"This is a rare and refreshing book. Taylor composes a tricky, teasing plot out of the blackness, revealing a gloomy city where sexy ice queens reveal spines tattooed with tiny equations. The Nick Cave of New Zealand literature." Claire Harvey, The Australian, April 19 2003.
"A l'image de Samuel Usher, le narrateur du brillant roman du Néo-Zélandais Chad Taylor, découvert il y a deux ans avec Shirker... Ce qui compte, ce sont des images morbides et inoubliables, et la vision hallucinée que Chad Taylor donne de notre époque. Ce qui compte, c'est la poésie. Ici, elle abonde." Le Figaro.
Chad Taylor travelled to the Sydney Writers' Festival in May 2003.
He was the University of Auckland Literary Fellow for 2003.
Taylor's novella 'Pack of Lies' appears in Nine New Zealand Novellas, edited by Peter Simpson (Reed, 2005). This is a companion volume to Seven New Zealand Novellas.
Departure Lounge (2006), was published by Jonathan Cape (UK).



