Menu Close
Director, International Institute of Modern Letters, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

Damien is the author of ten books, including the novels The Miserables, which won the New Zealand Book Award for fiction in 1994 and Nineteen Widows Under Ash, which was joint runner up for the Deutz Prize for Fiction in the 2001 Montana New Zealand Book Awards. His novel The Fainter was runner-up for the Montana Medal for Fiction in 2007 and was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize. He received a Whiting Writers’ Award from the Whiting Foundation, New York, in 1992, and his novels have been long-listed three times on the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award.

His essay-length book When Famous People Come to Town appeared in 2002. He has also published two books of stories, The Veteran Perils and for everyone concerned, and a book of poems, The Idles. His television scriptwriting includes work on Duggan and The Insiders Guide to Happiness. His first play, Drinking Games, was produced at Circa Theatre in 2008.

He holds an MFA from Washington University, has worked in publishing and was a founding editor of Sport. In 2005 the anthology he edited, Great Sporting Moments, won a Montana Book Award.

In 2008 Damien was awarded the Katherine Mansfield Fellowship. His latest novel, Somebody Loves Us All, was written during his time in Menton and published by Victoria University Press in 2009.

As a musician and songwriter, in 2011 he released an album of original material (‘Group Hug’) under the name The Close Readers; followed up by 'New Spirit' in 2012. His most recent publications as a co-editor are The Best of the Best New Zealand Poems, and The Exercise Book: Creative Writing Exercises from Victoria University’s International Institute of Modern Letters.

Damien's latest novel, Max Gate, was published by VUP in October, in the same month he received an Arts Foundation Laureate Award.

Experience

  • –present
    Director, International Institute of Modern Letters , Victoria University of Wellington