O. E. Middleton Explained

O.E. Middleton
Birth Date:25 March 1925
Birth Place:Christchurch, New Zealand
Death Date:14 August 2010
Nationality:New Zealand
Genre:Short Stories
Awards:Robert Burns Fellowship

O.E. (Osman Edward or Ted) Middleton (born 25 March 1925 in Christchurch, died 14 August 2010 in Dunedin) was a New Zealand writer of short stories, described as belonging to the vernacular critical realist tradition of Frank Sargeson.[1] He was the brother of noted New Zealand novelist Ian Middleton, and like him also blind from middle age.[2] Mentored by Frank Sargeson in Auckland in the late 1950s, he moved to Dunedin to take up the Robert Burns Fellowship (1970) at the University of Otago.

Prominent New Zealand author Janet Frame once said, "O. E. Middleton is a fine writer ... He's the only NZ writer who has made me weep over a story — one called The Stone in a volume of that title."[3] Middleton was the recipient of several awards, including the Hubert Church Award and the 2006 Janet Frame Literary Award. His Selected Stories shared first prize for Fiction in the New Zealand Book Awards in 1976.

A plaque featuring a quote from Middleton's 1970 Notebook was unveiled in February 2022 as part of the Dunedin Writer's Walk.[4]

Works

References

  1. The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998)
  2. News: Writer sees world through mind's eye . Benson, Nigel . 19 July 2008 . . 1 November 2011.
  3. http://www.janetframe.org.nz/Awards.htm Awards
  4. Web site: MacLean. Hamish. 2022-02-21. Two additions for Dunedin Writers' Walk. 2022-02-23. Otago Daily Times Online News. en.

External links