Arts – Ngā Kaituhi Māori NZSA programme recipients 2025

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Source: NZ Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa

The NZ Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa – Ngā Kaituhi Māori has announced the recipients of its The NZSA Ngā Kaituhi Māori Mentorship and Kupu Kaitiaki Programmes for 2025.

We are pleased to congratulate the four emerging writers who have each been selected for the Mentor Programme, with a six-month opportunity to work closely with an acclaimed Māori writer as their mentor to hone their tuhituhi ability and, in the process, evolve and refine a work toward a publishable manuscript.

The four mentor and mentees matchings are Hoani Hakaraia with Cassie Hart; Mereana Latimer with Emma Hislop; Tallullah Cardno with Steph Matuku and Tommy de Silvawith Cassie Hart.

The two emerging writers selected for the Kupu Kaitiaki Assessment programme for 2025 are Rose Toia and Billy Tangaere, who will receive detailed feedback on their writing and discuss next steps with their manuscript assessor.

Matua Witi Ihimaera DCNZM QSM (Ngāti Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki), NZSA’s Ngā Kaituhi Māori Chair, says “E ngā kaituhi tātou, ngā mihi. It’s always thrilling to read the work of new writers and to trust to your potential, congratulations, mīharo. And I am always grateful to senior writers like Emma Hislop, Cassie Hart and Steph Matuku who have stepped up to provide the important tuakana-teina relationship that lies at the centre of this NZSA-Ngā Kaituhi Māori kaupapa to nurture new literary stars, he ngākau atawhai o koutou. To those who weren’t successful in your applications to the Mentorship and Assessment programmes, keep trying, I was once in your ranks! Kia kaha to all, kia manawanui.”

Mentors – Mentees:

Emma Hislop’s (Kāi Tahu) book of fiction, Ruin and other stories, won the Hubert Church Prize for Fiction, Mātātuhi Foundation Best First Book Award at the 2024 Ockham Awards. She has a Masters in Creative Writing from IIML. In 2023 she was awarded the Michael King Writer’s Centre International Residency at Varuna House, NSW. Emma is part of Te Hā Taranaki, a collective for Māori writers, established in 2019. In 2025 she is herself an Arts Foundation mentee working with Te Tumu Toi Icon Patricia Grace DCNZM QSO. Emma will be mentoring Mereana Latimer.

Mereana Latimer (Ātiu, Ngā Wairiki, Ngāti Apa) is anchored where ngā hau e whā converge in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. Mereana’s writing has been included in Symposia, Turbine | Kapohau, Sweet Mammalian, takahē, Katūīvei (Massey University Press, 2024) and staged as part of an anthology with thanks to Prayas Theatre. Although a fool for poetry (with thanks to the Lemon Juice Writers’ Group), this mentorship supports Mereana to branch out into long-form prose.

Steph Matuku (Ngāti Mutunga, Ngāti Tama, Te Atiawa) is a writer from Taranaki and a graduate of Te Papa Tupu. Her first two novels, Flight of the Fantail and Whetū Toa and the Magician were Storylines Notable Books. Whetū Toa was a finalist at the 2019 New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults. Her recent novel for young adults, Migration, was winner of the NZ Booklovers Award for Best Young Adult Book 2025. Steph will be mentoring Tallulah Cardno.

Tallulah Cardno (Kāi Tahu, Ngāpuhi) (she/her) is a queer wahine living in Te Whanganui-A-Tara with her partner and young daughter. She comes from a family of writers and has been writing for as long as she can remember. Tallulah’s writing touches on the themes of queerness, motherhood, womanhood, grief, her Māori-Pākehā identity, her journey to reconnect to her Māori heritage, decolonisation, mental health, and relationships. She is a novelist and a poet, and has been published in Awa Wahine.

Cassie Hart (Kāi Tahu) is an award-winning Māori/Pakeha writer, editor and mentor from Taranaki and graduate of Te Papa Tupu. She writes speculative fiction under her own name as well as a further 10 titles published under pseudonym. She received special recognition for her services to Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror in 2021 with a Sir Julius Vogel award. Cassie will be mentoring both Tommy de Silva and Hoani Hakaraia.

Ko Tame de Silva tooku ingoa. He uri teenei noo Ngaati Te Ata me Te Waiohua. I’m a rangatahi freelance writer – with mahi published by Waipapa Taumata Rau, The Spinoff, and Lonely Planet – who hails from the scenic shores of Taamaki Makaurau. Through this tuakana-teina experience I hope to expand my writing arsenal by learning how to write fiction. Learning the ropes of how to put pen to paper to write a novel is a dream come true!

Hoani Hakaraia: He uri tēnei nō ngā iwi ō Tainui waka (Ngāti Raukawa te au ki te Tonga, Ngāti Wehi Wehi) me Te Arawa (Ngāti Whakaue, Ngāti Pikiao). I am a product of kohanga reo, whānau, hapū, iwi, and marae. Growing up in Ōtaki I have always been awed by the epic tales of Tāwhaki and Mauī. I never wanted to be a writer, but it seems my mother might have birthed a storyteller anyway. I never wanted to be a writer, but inspired by the stories of worlds’ dystopian and fantastic in books, on screens, and in the real histories of the South Pacific and beyond, I seek the skills to create a new story that provides a space for self-reflection and inspiration.

Kupu Kaitiaki Assessment Recipients:

Eva Rose Toia (Ngāpuhi) is a corporate writer in a kaupapa Māori organisation and has a background in transcription, editing, and language accessibility. Her career has centred on crafting clear writing that supports others in their mahi. She’s now using those skills to contribute to kaupapa that matter to her: the future of te reo Māori, and how we revive and protect the stories of our whānau, hapū, and marae. She has a growing interest in the impact of technology on indigenous peoples, and is drafting a memoir exploring relationships, intimacy, and identity. She writes with care, is fascinated by the stories held in a single word, and loves how language can change minds.

Billy Tangaere (Ngāti Porou) is a former soldier, artist, and MBA graduate whose words rise from the embers of a brutal past and soar toward ancestral light. In TOHU: A Journey of Healing, he walks the path of redemption with raw honesty, spiritual depth, and the unwavering strength of Māori wisdom. It answers the universal question on everyone’s lips: Who am I? Where do I belong? What is my calling? It is a story of self-discovery, healing, and redemption. Through the Māori lens of ancient knowing, Billy guides readers home—to their roots, their calling, and the stars where their ancestors wait. His story is not just his own—it is a mirror for all who seek healing, identity, and the courage to remember who they truly are. Seek the power of your roots.

The NZSA Kaituhi Māori Mentorship Programme was established to foster and develop emerging writing talent around New Zealand with the support of established authors. The programme aims to support the amplification of Māori voices and Māori stories, and ultimately see greater publication and performance of these works. There are four spaces in the programme each year.  

NZSA Kupu Kaitiaki Programme was established to provide new and emerging kaituhi with valuable feedback and a detailed manuscript assessment from a skilled Kupu Kaitiaki, working to refine and develop a manuscript. There are two places available annually.

These two programmes are recent additions to The New Zealand Society of Authors Te Puni Kaituhi o Aotearoa’s successful mentoring and assessment programmes for writers that have been running for over 30 years, and are an invaluable pipeline that nurtures emerging talent and helps new writers craft their manuscripts and build their skills.

MIL OSI

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