Michael Botur

Michael Stephen Botur (born 8 March 1984) is a New Zealand author described as "one of the most original story writers of his generation in New Zealand."[1]

Botur at the launch of short story collection True? on 4 October 2018 in Whangārei

Life and career

Born in Christchurch,[2] Botur first began publishing poetry and experimental fiction as an English major at the University of Otago. He was part of a group publishing the creative writing zine Blindswimmer.[3][4] Botur's earliest creative writing publication credits, between 2004 and 2009, were in New Zealand and international literary magazines, zines and websites including Takahe,[5] JAAM, Bravado, The Lumiere Reader, Prima Storia, Deep South, Catalyst, Sidestream, Insight, Subject, Blindswimmer, A3, Critic, Potroast, Debate and F*nk, Canada's The Med and NiL. He won the Her magazine short story competition in 2008.[6] Botur completed a Master of Creative Writing degree in 2009 at Auckland University of Technology, publishing a collection of short stories as his thesis including a dissertation on subcultures,[7] then trained as a journalist with Massey University, graduating at the beginning of 2015. Botur essayed in The Spinoff on 26 July 2017 about moving to Northland in 2015 and "finding income and inspiration in its very small economy", working at The Warehouse and other labour-intensive jobs, and finding story ideas.[8]

Botur at NZ Book Festival in Auckland, 17 November 2018
Botur at Rotorua Noir in January 2019

In 2019, Botur was featured at the Rotorua Noir Crime Writing Festival.[9]

In mid-2019, Botur launched a programme of publishing short stories every day for 100 days on social media and encouraged other New Zealand writers to do the same. The #100NZStories100days campaign encouraged Kiwi writers to post links to flash fiction and short prose already published in literary magazines and blogs. Botur said in an NZ Book Council news story: "I have a philosophy of ‘There’s no time like the present’ with a lot of my publishing. Fiction writers endure many forces which delay the publication of our work when we're keen to share it with the world. Life is short and I don't think it's right that publishers and competitions will keep an author waiting up to 12 months to share their work with the world."[10]

Botur published Loudmouth: Page and Pub Poems under the Wild West Writing imprint in December 2019 and began touring the book. Launched in Whangārei 6 December 2019, Loudmouth has been performed in Auckland, Rotorua, Tauranga and Christchurch.[11]

Loudmouth: Page and Pub Poems has been or is scheduled to be performed at festivals including: Rotorua Noir - 26 January 2019 [12] Whangārei Fringe Festival - 19 October 2020.[13] Earth Beat Festival - 20 March 2021 [14] In January 2021 Botur received a grant to perform Loudmouth: Page and Pub Poems and deliver creative writing workshops in Tauranga. Botur recorded Loudmouth as an album and launched on Spotify, iTunes, Bandcamp and Amazon Music in March 2021 and an official launch in Whangārei on 1 April 2021.[15]

Published works

Botur's published works include:

  • The Devil Took Her: Tales of Horror (2022) [16]
  • The Lockdownland Trilogy (2022) [17]
  • My Animal Family: (2021) [18]
  • Moneyland: Payback (2020)[19]
  • Hell of a Thing: Sixteen stories (2020)[20]
  • Crimechurch (2020)[21]
  • Loudmouth: page and pub poems (2019) [22]
  • True? (2018)[23]
  • Moneyland, a science fiction dystopian novel (2018)[24]
  • Lowlife(2017)[25]
  • Spitshine (2016)[26]
  • Mean: short stories (2013)[27]
  • Hot Bible! (2012)[28]


His latest novel The Devil Took Her will be released by The Sager Group in 2022.

Awards

Botur's awards and nominations include:

  • Whangārei Flash Fiction Award - 1st Place for Dad, Here's Us [29]
  • Short story Test of Death won the Australasian Horror Writers Association short story award[30]
  • Crime fiction novelCrimechurch - nominated for the 2021 Ngaio Marsh Awards for New Zealand crime fiction writing.[31]
  • Crimechurch - entered in the 2021 Ockham NZ Book Awards.[32]
  • Short story collection Hell of a Thing - entered in the 2021 Ockham NZ Book Awards.[33]
  • Novel Moneyland: Payback - nominated for the Best Youth Novel, 2021 Sir Julius Vogel Awards.[34]
  • Horror stories The Writing on the Rat and The Day I Skipped School nominated for the Sir Julius Vogel Awards 2021.[35]
  • Short Story Land 6-Month Competition - 1st place 2019 [36]
  • Whangārei Libraries Flash Fiction Competition 2019 – 2nd [37]
  • Northland Short Story Award – for highest Northland place in the National Flash Fiction Day Competition [38]
  • North & South Short Story Story Competition 2019 – 2nd [39]
  • Whangārei Libraries Flash Fiction Comp 2015 – first and second place winner[40]
  • Guest Fiction Writer (August 2014) – Tākahe magazine[41]
  • Miles Hughes Award – third place in 2014[42]
  • Takahe poetry competition 2012 – runner-up
  • Dan Davin Literary Award 2009 – highly commended[43]
  • NZSA Short Story Competition 2008/09 – third place, for ‘Latter Day Lepers’
  • Kiwi Short Story Competition, 2009 – second place, for ‘Home D’
  • Her magazine Short Story Competition, 2008 – winner
  • F*nk short short story competition, 2005 – second

References

  1. Elvy, Michelle (3 April 2016). "Michael Botur – Spitshine".
  2. "Michael Botur – New Zealand Society of Authors (PEN NZ Inc) Te Puni Kaituhi O Aotearoa".
  3. "Poetry Live". poetrylivelines.blogspot.com.
  4. "Poetry Live Lines". Poetry Live Lines Blogspot. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  5. "Search Results for "Michael Botur" – takahē magazine".
  6. "Northland Author Urges Switch To Digital As Novel Launched". auckland.scoop.co.nz. 27 November 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  7. Botur, Michael (2009). Shorty (Masters thesis). Tuwhera Open Access, Auckland University of Technology. hdl:10292/726.
  8. "Making art out of shit jobs". The Spinoff. 26 July 2017.
  9. "Poetry and Fiction Reading With Author Michael Botur". Stuff Events.
  10. 100 NZ Stories, 100 Days: author starts short story campaign
  11. Eventfinda - Loudmouth: Page and Pub Poems
  12. Poetry and Fiction Reading with author Michael Botur - Eventfinda
  13. Loudmouth: Page and Pub Poetry with Michael Botur
  14. Earth Words
  15. Loudmouth Page and Pub Poems by Michael Botur - Album launch
  16. "The Devil Took Her: Tales of Horror by Michael Botur - ISBN: 978-1950154838". www.thesagergroup.net. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  17. "Lockdownland by Michael Botur - ISBN: 979-8836054625". www.amazon.com. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  18. Michael Botur (2021). My animal family. Whangārei. ISBN 978-0-473-61047-0. OCLC 1294404508.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  19. "Moneyland: Payback by Michael Botur (Webnovel)". www.webnovel.com.
  20. "Hell of a Thing: Sixteen Stories ISBN: 9781950154135 (The Sager Group)". The Sager Group.
  21. "Crimechurch by Michael Botur ISBN: 9780995116665(Rangitawa Publishing)". Rangitawa Publishing.
  22. "Poetry Book Launch Loudmouth ISBN: 9781697236583".
  23. "Book review – True? Short stories". RNZ. 18 April 2019.
  24. "5 Minutes With Author Michael Botur". Tearaway. 11 February 2018.
  25. "Short stories about real people". 22 March 2018 via www.nzherald.co.nz.
  26. "Spitshine: Short Stories by Michael Botur – ISBN: 9781508840206 (Createspace)". www.wheelers.co.nz.
  27. "Mean: Short Stories by Michael Botur – ISBN: 9781491226650 (Createspace)". www.wheelers.co.nz.
  28. "The Long and the Short of It – {{{1}}}:(Createspace)". The Big Idea.
  29. "Creative Writing 2022 Winners | Read NZ". www.wdc.govt.nz. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  30. "NZBC Stories Details | Read NZ". www.read-nz.org. Retrieved 29 January 2022.
  31. "2021 Ngaio Marsh Award Nominee". 22 February 2021.
  32. "How to write frictionless fiction". 7 September 2020.
  33. "How to write frictionless fiction". 7 September 2020.
  34. "Science Fiction and Fantasy Association of New Zealand Inc". 22 February 2021.
  35. "Science Fiction and Fantasy Association of New Zealand Inc". 22 February 2021.
  36. "US Short Story Award Win for Northland Author". 17 October 2019.
  37. "Reviews, Media and Awards". 11 May 2020.
  38. "Reviews, Media and Awards". 11 May 2020.
  39. "The 2019 Short Short Story Winners Revealed". 2 May 2019.
  40. "Flash Fiction Competition 2015 Winners – Whangarei Libraries". www.whangarei-libraries.com.
  41. "takahē 82 – August 2014". 3 December 2015.
  42. "Out + About". Ponsonby News. 28 November 2014.
  43. Refugee story takes top Dan Davin award, Stuff 8 September 2009
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.