Welcome

Best New Zealand Poems is published annually by the International Institute of Modern Letters, and aims to introduce readers—especially internationally—to leading contemporary New Zealand poets. The poems are chosen to show the vitality and range of current writing. We have shamelessly modelled this online project on the successful US paperback anthology, The Best American Poetry. Each year we publish 25 poems from recent literary magazines and poetry collections, where possible including notes about and by the poet, as well as links to related publishing and literary websites. In this way we hope that readers will be able to follow up fresh discoveries. There are plenty to be made.

The editorship of Best New Zealand Poems changes annually. This year’s editor is current Poet Laureate Ian Wedde. Earlier editors were Bernadette Hall (2011), Chris Price (2010), Robyn Marsack (2009), James Brown (2008), Paula Green (2007), Anne Kennedy and Robert Sullivan (2006), Andrew Johnston (2005), Emma Neale (2004), Robin Dudding (2003), Elizabeth Smither (2002) and Iain Sharp (2001).

This edition brings with it another changing of the guard. Bill Manhire retired at the end of 2012, relinquishing the role of series editor for Best New Zealand Poems. The anthology is just one of many lively projects Bill has initiated during his time at Victoria University, and we aim to take good care of it in its second decade. This year we also note with some sadness the passing of Ralph Hotere, whose drawing for the first edition of James K Baxter’s Jerusalem Sonnets (Bibliography Room, University of Otago, 1970) we have used on our opening page since our first edition. We continue to be grateful for Ralph's permission to use this work.

While Best New Zealand Poems is a digital native, we still like books—and so in 2011 we chose to celebrate the journal’s tenth birthday with a great leap sideways from the digital domain into the world of print. The Best of Best New Zealand Poems (Victoria University Press), edited by Bill Manhire and Damien Wilkins, offers a condensed view of the first decade, with over 60 poets represented. In a period when the future of the book is being hotly debated, we are encouraged that the anthology is already in its second printing.

Best New Zealand Poems is supported by a grant from Creative New Zealand, whose assistance we gratefully acknowledge. Creative New Zealand’s grant goes entirely to contributors and editor.

Chris Price
International Institute of Modern Letters
Wellington

April, 2013

Next section.

Creative New Zealand NZETC Victoria University of Wellington