Article Magazine

  • Five questions with Kristin Kelly

    Joy Cowley Award-winning author Kristin Kelly is about to release a new picture book, Mitchell Itches, about a boy growing up with eczema. An ex-nurse who moved into primary teaching after having children, Kristin initially started writing books when she found there was nothing available about certain topics she wanted to bring into her classroom.

    I caught up with Kristin to ask her a few questions about her writing process, eczema and her publishing journey.
  • Q & A with Jules Daniel

    Despite using they/them pronouns comedian Jules Daniel swears they are definitely, if not probably, not a horde of bees. A 29yo with a BA (theatre & film, with a minor in gender and sexuality) from Victoria University, Jules has been nominated for Young Performer of the Year twice (2012/2010) and for Best Joke and Best Newcomer at the 2019 Wellington Comedy Awards. They were a Wellington Raw Quest finalist in 2020 as well as producing and performing shows in and around Wellington and performing comedy at the Welcome to Nowhere Festival (2019/2023).

    You can catch Jules at the NZ International Comedy Festival with Best Foods Mayo with their show The Transgender Agenda on 25 May at Fringe Bar. You can also see them on the line-up at The Wellington Comedy Club Rainbow Showcase on 15 May at Te Auaha.

    I caught up with them ahead of these performances to ask a few questions about their shows, comedy in general and just what (or who) makes them laugh.
  • This Reading Life With Gregory Hill

    French horn player Gregory Hill enjoyed a successful career in orchestras in both Australia and New Zealand, including three decades as a Principal player in the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra. Throughout this time he secretly nurtured a passion for long-distance train travel, which he finally indulged in after his retirement.

    His adventures on an epic railway journey from New Zealand to Spain has now been chronicled in his book, The Antipodean Express, which celebrates the enduring romance of traveling by train across 89 days of travel, on 33 trains, through 19 countries. It begins in New Zealand’s North Island, to the red centre of Australia, weaves past the volcanoes of Java, through East Asia and on into Europe.

    I asked Greg for a sneaky peek at his reading life.