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April 10, 2026
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"It was a huge learning curve, to be honest. I never pictured myself writing a novel, so when my husband suggested I take some time off work and do some writing, I thought Iâll have a go at some short stories. And then I discovered this story, and it just wouldnât fit within the form of the short story, so I enrolled in a fiction course â I had joined it for short stories, though it was generally for beginning fiction â but I had to figure this out a lot quicker than the course offered, so alongside that I bought about thirty books on âhow toâ, and how other authors have done it, and really threw myself into figuring out the structure of a novel. With poetry you canât just âdip inâ â the poems are a complete little story on their own, they are like little starbursts. But this story took two years, and I couldnât write poetry that whole time, because it just felt like a completely different discipline. What I did learn was to try and bring the poetry through with me, so I still felt like a poet writing this book. So in a way I think Iâve been able to have the best of both worlds."
"Yes I hope so â I want to continue to write fiction, I really have the fiction writing bug, but I hope I havenât lost the knack for writing poetry. Iâm going to keep plugging away at it every now and then, because I do love it. Itâs a very difficult art form, and I admire the people who have done very well at it."
"Yes, Iâve been quite overwhelmed actually. Itâs really not what you expect, especially for a first novel, so I am absolutely thrilled that people are connecting â not only to the family side, the interest in chasing your own roots â but also to the history of Pakeha in New Zealand, and what it was like from that side too. Iâm really intrigued to see what people find in it â they all find something different, and Iâm liking the layers that people are seeing. So Iâm thrilled, you couldnât ask for more."
"Yes, the names were right at the top of the tree, the four Finnegan family members, with a note saying âmurderedâ on it â âOtahuhu murders 1865â â with the murdererâs name and the date he was hung. Everything else was just standard on that family tree, with little dates, and arrows, no information at all apart from that, so I thought âthat is rather interesting.â"
"No, not at all. The family tree came to me in a peculiar way â my mother and my fatherâs second wife are cousins, so their family trees are the same â so it was my fatherâs second wife who did the tree, and I never got hold of it until she died. Both her and my mother are unfortunately no longer with us, and my brother had the family tree, and I saw it there and swiped it. So Iâd never seen it before that â Iâd known it existed and I had tried to get it, but was unsuccessful. So I went home and unravelled it, because it was all in this funny little scroll, and it was the first time I saw it. Then I was researching straight away and I thought this would be a short story. The interest wasnât initially around the family thing, but the story â I wanted to know who these people were and their times. Both James Stack and the Finnegan family were Irish Catholic, so they had come out from different parts of Ireland â one south, one north â and I wanted to know what brought them out here, who they were and what it was like here for them; that really was the basis of my research."
"No, again I sort of stumbled along. I was writing form the perspective of James Stack initially â I had tried writing it from the motherâs point of view, but it didnât work. So I was halfway through the novel with James Stack, when I discovered the story of the ghost of John Finnegan, and I started looking into that. Then I went to the site and found the old cottage and got talking to an elderly neighbour who had lived there forever, and he was telling me about the ghost, and as the house was abandoned for two years the neighbours would dare it each other to stay overnight to see if the ghost appeared. And this elderly gentleman had done it himself, but he said âit was all hoo-ha, he didnât appear.â But I kind of felt something while I was there â I really felt this connection to the little boy â it really intrigued me why he was still there. And so I went home and I left the second half of James behind and I wrote Johnâs section all in one go, and then wove it throughout the story. John became the hero from there. So it was all sort of piecemeal, it all came together as I discovered things."
"Yes, definitely, and you think about all the different branches and stories that must be in your family. I have since discovered that there is Jewish and German heritage as well, and Iâm thinking, âwhat other stories are thereâ? I think itâs really important to know where weâve come from, because now I can actually identify with my Irish-ness, and I can understand."
"I had the help of a fellow from the Dublin historical society â he was sending me pictures and information and I did a lot my own research â so it wasnât hard to imagine what it was like."
"Itâs all come through stories that I read of the time. The young girl being arrested for stealing a handkerchief and being put on the ship â that was a real twelve year old girl. And the famines, and the cottages being bowled over to make way for new crops and sheep while it was all going over to England â that was all happening at the time. And the same in New Zealand. The character of Abel is a âPakeha Maoriâ, he didnât actually exist in the story with James, but my research on Pakeha Maori â I based Abel on one particular fellow â they intrigued me. And this one that I researched in depth actually did become a mediator in the Maori land court in Auckland, and to me that was just too much richness to leave behind. There was a whole parallel going on between the Irish and the Maori, and I wanted this affinity to be shown, and also the different perspectives of these two Irish guys that came out, and the way it changed them and how they reacted to it â perhaps not as you would expect they would. And at the time someone like Abel would have been perceived as being lost, gone off the rails â but he wasnât. He had that sprit ritual call. And again, while researching that time, the Kingitanga, there was that spiritual call that was much wiser than a lot of the European ways. In the research I also came across one of the men who was in charge of the 65th, and he resigned because he refused to accept the way the Maori were being treated â so that really was there too. There was a lot going on."
"No, and I donât really think it was like that back then, in the early nineteenth century. I think the two sides at times really did reach out to each other â especially the lower class Europeans."
"Exactly â we can put people inside a box and say âyour this sort of person for doing this, youâre that sort of person.â I donât like that at all, so I think youâre right â there is this whole middle ground that people forget, that we all move between."
"Yes, very much so. I wanted to know what made him do what he did â because there is always a story. Maybe some people are born bad but a lot the time its circumstantial, and I can kind of understand. But in the end we are formed by the choices we make."
"No, I was quite isolated from that part of the family. My mother was an only child and her father died quite young, so there was no contact. My grandmother went on to have many more children to her next marriage, as they did back then, so that was the family. But having said that, there is a relative I have been in contact with recently, just through the novel coming out, and she has described how members of her family were horrified at her delving into this, as they didnât want the dirty linen brought out. But I havenât really gone there â the family was much more notorious than I have written, I knew about that."
"Of course they are both Irish Catholics, so they would have had this sense of purgatory, and praying loved ones out of purgatory. But again, there is that whole grey area, and I really wanted to play with that whole idea. I have this quote from Pope John Paul, which says âheaven and hell are primarily eternal states of consciousness, rather than geographical places of later reward or punishmentâ. I thought that means that in life we are able to put ourselves into a state of purgatory, because itâs a state of consciousness â and therefore the punishment and reward can be cause and effect. I overlaid that on James â he has placed himself inside a state of purgatory and try as he might he just canât seem to get himself out, whether through his own choices or through circumstances â really itâs a bit of both â and in the end he chooses his ultimate fate. And for John, still being here as a ghost, to me it made sense that he was in a state of purgatory too. Maybe for him it was choice, maybe it was literally that he was anchored to the ground somehow â to the cottage that he was born in. Then I started looking into Maori mythology, and how some return to watch over their mokopuna as birds or trees, and I thought that that was really very beautiful. They have the choice of going home â and with the Irish, home was either going back to your original home, or heaven â whatever that is for you. And so to me, that whole place of purgatory opened up opportunities, rather than being restrictive. And I thought, âwhat if we have a choice?â We could become the brightest star in the sky so that our family could know that was us, or we could become an owl that comes to visit, or we could go homeâ they are all beautiful stories â why not choose?"
"Yes, and itâs also that ghostly side â itâs not a scary thing, or death not being a scary thing, itâs just a part of everyday life, that perhaps we are not aware of as much. So to me there were all these openings that I could play with, and explore. For personal reasons too â so I really enjoyed it."
"I didnât. It was originally called âMother Mary under a Bed of Carrotsâ â that was my working title. But my agent thought it was too whimsical, and he gave it the title âPurgatoryâ, which I struggled with for quite some time â because it was so serious, and scary, and a bit daring â but I absolutely love it now, absolutely couldnât imagine another title â so thank you Michael!"
"You do become quite ritualistic as a writer, and very precious about your time. Because I have no office in our house I write from my bed â so itâs a crazy little set up â I have my bed and my shelves all around me and I get up very early, kick my husband out, feed the dog, then I come straight back to bed before doing anything. I close the blinds, shut the door so itâs a darkened room, and I find that helps me focus because if itâs a beautiful day, or the wind is blowing its very distracting. So the dog usually snuggles next to me and I do this sort of head clearing thing, which seems to be a necessity, which I never realised I was doing until half way through the book when I was sort of breathing and feeling something starting to percolate â and then I would start. And I would start by reading what I had written the day before, and maybe editing. And there is always this push into the new prose â I donât know if other writers feel that, but I actually sort of have to kick myself up the bum and say âgo!â Itâs almost like you have to be brave and say âjust go!â and then youâre off."
"I just write and then I go back â and I am hideously painful at going back and back and back, and then I give it to my husband to read, and he will go âhmmmâ and so then I go back again. But initially I just let it out. And I cut big sections out, where youâve just âwalked into the forest to pick daisiesâ â after a while you become more disciplined at seeing those parts and chopping them out. Then when Iâm done I feel great â there is no other feeling that equates to that."
"Yes, I have a few favourites. Tim Winton is a favourite; I just love the way his language is so beautiful and the way he crosses that line too into magical realism, where you are in this normal place and this strangeness will waft in, whether itâs a ghost or whatever â I have much respect for that. At the time I also read Hamish Claytonâs Wulf and that inspired me a great deal â again the language and the story â I found him to be extraordinary. And Iâve always loved Janette Frame, and she does similar things. At university I tended to lean more towards sort of gothic novels, so it will be interesting to see what my next one is like. Iâm not planning it to be dark or scary in any way, but definitely explorative â just see where it takes me. Itâll be interesting to see whether this dark, slightly gothic thing is me â Iâm not sure. Maybe it was just this novel."
"Apparently we Kiwis are really bad at that, not sticking to genre! We must have a real creative freedom â I like it."
"Yes, I have a story pretty much mapped out, but again they change as you are writing it. Itâs centred around another murder that I know of, and that Iâm quite intrigued with, and its more contemporary. So it think possibly I will explore contemporary issues through it â Iâm quite looking forward to it."
"Back to the bedroom, very soon! As soon as all this settles I will be incognito again â for the next two years!"
Heute, am 12. Tag schlagen wir unser Lager in einem sehr merkwĂźrdig geformten HĂśhleneingang auf. Wir sind von den Strapazen der letzten Tage sehr erschĂśpft, das Abenteuer an dem groĂen Wasserfall steckt uns noch allen in den Knochen. Wir bereiten uns daher nur ein kurzes Abendmahl und ziehen uns in unsere Kalebassen-Zelte zurĂźck. Dr. Zwitlako kann es allerdings nicht lassen, noch einige Vermessungen vorzunehmen. 2. Aug.
- Das Tagebuch
Es gab sie, mein Lieber, es gab sie! Dieses Tagebuch beweist es. Es berichtet von rätselhaften Entdeckungen, die unsere Ahnen vor langer, langer Zeit während einer Expedition gemacht haben. Leider fehlt der grĂśĂte Teil des Buches, uns sind nur 5 Seiten geblieben.
Also gibt es sie doch, die sagenumwobenen Riesen?
Weil ich so nen Rosenkohl nicht dulde!
- Zwei auĂer Rand und Band
Und ich bin sauer!