Talented teen wins national poetry award

Talented teenager Eden Tautali has won the National Schools Poetry Award for 2011 with a personal account of grief.

The Year 13 student at Auckland’s St Cuthbert’s College, has won the award with her poem Nan, addressing the death of her Nan and the experience of speaking at her funeral. Read her poem here.

Eden, who is of Māori and Samoan descent, was one of 10 finalists in the poetry competition for Year 12 and 13 secondary school students, organised by New Zealand’s oldest and most prestigious creative writing programme, the International Institute of Modern Letters (IIML) at Victoria University.

Judge and current New Zealand Poet Laureate, Cilla McQueen says while the poem confronts loss and regret, it also has the comfort of warm memories.

Nan is a difficult, honest admission of grief, written in restrained, effective language,” says McQueen.

“I looked for imagination, a glimpse of a world beyond the poem, some engagement with contemporary life, and especially for that original spark at the heart of the finished work. Eden’s poem was a standout, with its haunting image of grief whispering ‘to a bent microphone’.”  

Eden is also a talented singer and songwriter who in May won the inaugural Matariki songwriting competition for Auckland secondary school students.

Prize details
Eden and the nine other finalists will attend a one day poetry masterclass at the International Institute of Modern Letters. In addition, Eden will receive $500 cash, as well as $500 for her school library. She will also have her poem displayed on posters in towns and cities throughout New Zealand.

The National Schools Poetry Award has been providing a forum for young writers since 2003. Creative New Zealand has provided major support for the Award for 2011, along with The New Zealand Book Council, the New Zealand Society of Authors, the Bolton Hotel, Unity Books (Wellington), and the literary journals Landfall and Sport.