As part of her recent Janet Frame Memorial Lecture on the state of literature in New Zealand, Charlotte Grimshaw dwelt on a personal battle for authenticity, excerpted here.

This is the Janet Frame Memorial Lecture and here is a memory of Janet Frame. I remember visiting her house in a
small town, where we discovered Janet was dealing with her hypersensitivity to noise by barricading herself in, lining the internal walls.

The Mirror Book. Photo / Supplied The Mirror Book. Photo / Supplied

The Mirror Book was my account of growing up in a family that had a public face and a troubled private dynamic.

Charlotte Grimshaw

Charlotte Grimshaw with her mother, Kay. Photo / Marti FriedlanderCharlotte Grimshaw with her mother, Kay. Photo / Marti Friedlander

[CK] describes my writing as ‘a mental aberration with no foundation in fact’, and a ‘delusion’.

Charlotte Grimshaw

Karl and Kay Stead and Charlotte Grimshaw at the family home in Parnell, Auckland, c2017.  Photo / SuppliedKarl and Kay Stead and Charlotte Grimshaw at the family home in Parnell, Auckland, c2017. Photo / Supplied

Charlotte Grimshaw: "We don’t want ‘celebratory’ hagiographies by robotic enablers. At least I hope we don’t." Photo / Supplied
Charlotte Grimshaw: “We don’t want ‘celebratory’ hagiographies by robotic enablers. At least I hope we don’t.” Photo / Supplied

SaveShare this article

Reminder, this is a Premium article and requires a subscription to read.

Copy LinkEmailFacebookTwitter/XLinkedInReddit