Acclaimed novelist Anna Smaill has been appointed as Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington International Institute of Modern Letters (IIML) and Creative New Zealand Writer in Residence for 2025.
Anna began her publishing career with a volume of poetry, The Violinist in Spring, which was released in 2005 by Te Herenga Waka University Press. Her first novel The Chimes won the prestigious award for Best Novel at the 2016 World Fantasy Awards. It was also longlisted for the Booker Prize and translated into four languages. Her second novel Bird Life was published in 2023 in the US, UK, and Australia to excellent reviews, with The Times (UK) calling it “a deeply affecting novel [that] transcend[s] cultural barriers while reaching through them to the essentially human”. Locally, it was longlisted for the Ockham Book Awards.
While holding the residency at the IIML, Anna will work on a novel tentatively titled The Blazing, which she describes as “part archival thriller, part coming-of-age story”. Set in both the US and UK, the novel will be “an examination of the value and worth of art and history in the midst of cultural collapse, and will explore ideas of provenance and whakapapa. In testing how individual stories can ripple outward to effect historical change, it will follow a path back to Aotearoa New Zealand,” said Anna.
Director of the International Institute of Modern Letters Damien Wilkins said, “Anna’s two novels put her in the front rank of writers in this country and we’re thrilled to have her in Bill Manhire House next year”.
Commenting on the appointment, Anna said, “I am so grateful for the chance to work on my next book at the International Institute of Modern Letters in 2025, the place where I first started to take myself seriously as a writer. The residency position represents time and creative freedom. But even more it represents the collective mana of the institute and all the writers it has fostered. I feel very lucky to be part of it”.
Anna takes up the residency at the IIML on 1 February 2025.
In 2001, Anna completed an MA in Creative Writing at the IIML. She subsequently lived and studied overseas, receiving a PhD in English Literature from University College, University of London. She has worked as an academic and as a senior communications advisor. Most recently she was the team leader of Te Papa’s English writing team. Anna is also an accomplished literary critic, having published articles on writers such as Janet Frame and Bill Manhire.
In 2015, Anna was a finalist in the Wellingtonian of the Year, Arts category. She also received a New Generation Award that year from the Arts Foundation.