Quinn Berentson

Born in the Bay of Plenty and based in Otago, Quinn is an experienced and multi-skilled writer, documentary director and photographer who has created a wide range of projects for international clients such as Discovery Channel, National Geographic, Animal Planet and History Channel. Coming from a solid scientific background (he has a first-class Honours degree in Zoology and a Masters degree in Science Communication) Quinn enjoys telling factual stories in a creative and visually interesting style. In 2000 Quinn was co-nominated for an Emmy™ Award in "Outstanding Craft In Documentary Writing" for the Animal Planet documentary "The Twisted Tale of the Rat" and late 2012 he published his first book, a non-fiction scientific history of the moa entitled “Moa – the life and death of New Zealand’s legendary bird”. It won the 2013 New Zealand Book Awards “Best First Book” and the Royal Society of New Zealand’s 2013 Science Book Prize.  


Genre:

  • Adult Non-Fiction

Skills:

  • Freelance Writing
  • Print Media Writing (magazines/newspapers)
  • Public Speaking
  • Screenwriting
  • Website Content

Branch:

Otago/Southland

Location:

Sawyers Bay, Dunedin

Publications:


Moa - the life and death of New Zealand's legendary bird.

The moa were the most unusual and unique family of birds that ever lived, a clan of feathered monsters that developed in isolation for many, many millions of years. They became extinct reasonably quickly after the arrival of the Maori, and were a distant memory by the time European explorers arrived. So the discovery and identification of their bones in the 1840s was a worldwide sensation, claimed by many to be the zoological find of the century. This book begins by recounting the story of discovery, which was characterised by an unbelievable amount of controversy and intrigue. Since then there has been an unbroken chain of new discoveries, culminating with intriguing revelations in recent years about the moa’s biology, that have come to light through DNA testing and radio-dating. This is a fascinating and important book that richly recounts the life and death of our strangest bird. Packed with a fantastic range of illustrations, Moa fills an important gap in our natural history literature, a popular but serious book on this national icon. Winner of the 2013 New Zealand Post Best First Book Non Fiction Winner of the 2013 Royal Society of New Zealand Science Book Prize