Showing posts with label Press news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Press news. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Belinda Cooke takes on additional role


We're very happy to share the news that Belinda Cooke, our Sales & Marketing Consultant, has been appointed Manager of the New Zealand Book Awards Trust. Belinda works part-time for Oratia, and will balance the two roles with her other sales and marketing consulting: 

Monday, May 16, 2016

Oratia on Māori Television

Oratia Books publisher Peter Dowling was interviewed today for Te Kāea, which aired at 5.30pm on Māori Television. Below is a snippet from the Online News Team:


Oratia Media rebrands and expands

By Online News Team 
A new year, a new name, and expansion. This year marks a new departure for Oratia Media as they relaunched their books programme as Oratia Books.
Oratia Books are committed to supporting Māori Books and Māori Authors.
This year Oratia Books will publish at least ten titles, including new books from bestselling authors like Christopher Pugsley and Dawn McMillan & Ross Kinnaird, as well as titles from a number of new authors.

Images from tonight programme

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Oratia Books: reaching globally from the Waitakeres - PANZ News

Oratia Books is the feature in the Publishers Association of New Zealand (PANZ) News this week:



Oratia media teamBetween them the Oratia Media publishing team have seven languages – Japanese, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and te reo Māori as well as English – so it is no wonder their publishing is reaching both New Zealand and world markets.
Oratia Books has a place to stand in the hills of the area’s West Coast Road on their own acre and a quarter with home and office surrounded by native forest. Their publishing reflects West Auckland too – three recent titles and a fourth in production are all firmly grounded in the Waitakeres. Voices from the Surf, 80 years of Karekare surf lifesaving history, events and recollections edited by Sir Bob Harvey was a highlight for the company last Christmas.
However, the Oratia tūrangawaewae had unlikely beginnings....

Source http://www.publishers.org.nz/oratia-books-local-and-global-from-the-waitakeres/

Monday, November 17, 2014

Gallipoli makes the Top 100



Gallipoli: The New Zealand Story is one of the New Zealand Listener's top 100 books of 2014 - and one of only five listed in the Science, History & Social Issues category.

Congratulations to author Christopher Pugsley for this well-deserved recognition, and all the team who worked on the new edition of this great book.

The New Zealand Listener is also giving readers a chance to win this and the other 99 books; just click on the link below to enter:

Friday, September 5, 2014

Maori Weapons in the news

Maori Weapons in Pre-European New Zealand has sold well and got a good media response since publication on 21 August. Here's author Jeff Evans featured in yesterday's Western Leader, click here to read the article.




Saturday, April 12, 2014

Read about The Last Maopo on the New Zealand WW100 website

The Last Maopoa book to be officially launched on Anzac Day 2014, provides insight into the Māori experience of the First World War by retelling the life of Ngāi Tahu soldier Wiremu Maopo. Through more than 40 letters to his friend Virgie Fincham at his home outside Christchurch, Wiremu depicts the robust contribution the Māori Pioneer Battalion made to the First World War – despite official attempts to keep them away from frontline duties Read more

Thursday, March 13, 2014

A sea story from Tessa Duder

In the March issue of North & South magazine Tessa Duder writes about sailing from Australia to New Zealand in the first Trans-Tasman Tall Ships race. 

Tessa combines a deep knowledge of sailing with a rare storytelling flair. 

In 2012 Libro International published her book The Story of Peter Blake, the life of one of our most famous sailors retold for younger readers; and this November we're delighted to be releasing her new collection Sea Stories, a dozen short stories about children and young people living and learning on boats. 

One of the stories took inspiration from Tessa's recent voyage - but we can't give any more away than that just yet!




Thursday, August 1, 2013

Māori Maps shortlisted for World Summit Awards



Te Potiki National Trust has welcomed its nomination as a finalist in the World Summit Awards for the Māori Maps website, www.maorimaps.com.

Communications and Information Technology Minister Amy Adams yesterday congratulated Te Potiki National Trust and the seven other New Zealand organisations that have made the finals in the global World Summit Awards for creativity and innovation in ICT.

“It is great to see New Zealand projects of this calibre being recognised on the world stage. It is particularly important that we celebrate and encourage the high level of innovation and creativity that we have in this country,” Ms Adams said.

Te Potiki National Trust Chairperson Paora Tapsell said this recognition was reward for the hard work of its largely voluntary team.

Over the past five years, Māori Maps has created a digital database of marae locations, photographs and information to assist Māori descendants, as well as visitors, in connecting with the more than 750 ancestral marae in New Zealand.

“This unexpected honour will help to promote our message about how unique our marae are in the world, and how important they are for the identity and well-being of present and future generations of Māori.”

He thanked the Trust’s volunteers and supporters for their faith in the project.


Key backing for Māori Maps has come from The Tindall Foundation, the University of Otago, the University of Auckland, the Foundation for Research, Science and Technology, and several community trusts.

The www.maorimaps.com website, based on Google Maps, lets users navigate by a range of filters to locate marae – and now lists about 98% of the ancestral marae around the country.

The site is designed and hosted by Auckland-based Zest Media, and managed by the Trust’s Online Producer, Mike Hennessy.

Te Potiki National Trust is now adding archival photos and taonga links to the site, and working to complete translation of all content into Te Reo Māori. 

For further information, contact:
 Peter Dowling, Kaihautu; 09 814 8993, pita@maorimaps.com


Note: Oratia Media, publisher of Libro International books, is a supporter of Te Potiki National Trust and Peter acts as its kaihautu/chief executive. 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Tim Tipene inducted into Hall of Fame



Tim Tipene has been inducted into the New Zealand Martial Arts Hall of Fame. Tim is the founder of the renowned Warrior Kids programme and Master Arts classes, and is an award-winning author.

Tim, 41, became a student of martial arts at the age of 12. In 1994 he set up his own school, now called Master Arts, and began a holistic life-skills programme based on the arts for children called Warrior Kids. Tim has gone on to provide Warrior Kids to communities and schools for 18 years, changing the lives of thousands of children and their families.

Tim feels honoured to be acknowledged by the martial arts community for what he regards as his art of peace. Master Arts is a form of non-violent self protection and intervention, focusing on de-escalation and the containment of aggressive behaviour. ‘Master Arts is winning against an opponent without drawing the sword. In other words winning without the use of violence and winning without causing defeat,’ says Tim.

Warrior Kids is a Master Arts programme for children aged between 5 and 13 and follows the same message. 'If you teach a child to hit then they will hit. If you hit you get into trouble at school, you get into trouble with the law, people get hurt and you get negative consequences. That is a fact,’ comments Tim.

Warrior Kids gives children alternatives to violence, and builds up their awareness and confidence. 'The children are certainly taught self protection, but they are not taught strikes or throws, or to use pain or power over tactics.'

Tim is not sure if what he does could easily be classed as martial arts any more. 'I called it Master Arts because it is really about mastering the self,’ he comments. ‘Master Arts is the ultimate in anger management because through the training you remould the anger and the responses to anger physically and mentally. Students are taught safe and constructive ways to address problems. Master Arts is about safe homes and safe communities.'

The New Zealand Martial Arts Hall of Fame, (NZMAHOF), was established in 1995 with the aim of providing leadership in martial arts at the very highest level. The NZMAHOF Awards are held every two years to honor those Martial Artists who have contributed, served and cultivated martial arts in New Zealand in an outstanding manner. Tim will attend a ceremony in November where he will receive his award.

Tim is also the award-winning author of a number of books for children and young adults, including a manual about his Warrior Kids programme.

For more information visit www.timtipene.com or phone 021 525 450 or 09 833 9408. 

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

I Need a New Bum - Still in the Top 10




Great to see I Need a New Bum still sitting in the Top 10 New Zealand children and teen's books eight months after its release. Sales are now over 12,000 copies and growing - testament to the storytelling wizadry of Dawn McMillan, illustrating powers of Ross Kinnaird, editing prowess of Carolyn Lagahetau and design flair of Cheryl Smith. 

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Oratia Media and Libro International featured in the Tatler Magazine




Thank you Murray Gray for the informative article about Oratia Media and Libro International published this month in the Tatler magazine.

Murray, program director of the Going West Books & Writers Festival, and owner of Gone West Books in Titirangi, offers readers a quick peek into Libro International's upcoming books and projects. You can read the March 2012 issue of the Tatler online by clicking here, and find the article on page 24 in BookQuest, Murray's monthly literary column.

Monday, November 14, 2011

To the Gateways of Florence on Cartolina & Plains FM





Cartolina & Plains FM 
Cartolina is the programme of Italian culture and life that airs on PLAINS FM 96.9 every second Wednesday at 7.30pm and repeats on the following Monday at 10.30am. You can listen to each pro-gramme from everywhere in the world, either live or recorded on pod cast, on the website 
http://plainsfm.org.nz/podcasts/programme/cartolina/ 

9 & 14 November 
Publisher Peter Dowling, and Jill and Stefano Fusi (translator and editor, respectively) talk about the launch of the book To the Gateways of Florence, about the New Zealand forces in Tuscany in 1944, and the (now) well known episode of the liberation of the little town of Tavarnelle in Val di Pesa.



In italiano:

Cartolina & Plains FM 
Cartolina è il programma di cultura e di vita italiana trasmesso da Plains FM 96.9, ogni secondo mercoledì dalle ore 19.30, e viene ripetuto il lunedì seguente alle ore 10.30. Si possono ascoltare le puntate andate in onda da ogni angolo nel mondo, dal vivo o registrate nel pod-cast, basta andare sul sito web 
http://plainsfm.org.nz/podcasts/programme/cartolina/ 

9 & 14 novembre 
L’editore Peter Dowling, e Jill and Stefano Fusi (traduttrice e revisore, rispettivamente) parlano del lancio del libro To the Gateways of Florence, sui militari neozelandesi in Toscana nel 1944, e sull’episodio (adesso) famoso della liberazione del paese di Tavarnelle in Val di Pesa




Tuesday, October 18, 2011

From the Beattie's Book Blog - Frankfurt Book Fair 2011: New Zealand publishers up the game



Peter Dowling reports from Frankfurt: 

On the final morning of this year’s Frankfurt Book Fair, many of the New Zealand exhibitors were to be found at the Sport-Club Frankfurt 1880, along with local Kiwis and embassy staff from Berlin, watching the All Blacks take on the Wallabies....


Read the full report on the Beattie's Book Blog


Photos: Peter Dowling


Monday, August 1, 2011

Māori Maps






MEDIA RELEASE

Auckland/Tāmaki-makaurau
1 August / 1 Heri-turi-kōkā 2011                                                                        7.00 a.m.

For immediate release

New website www.maorimaps.com connects people and marae

Te Potiki National Trust this morning officially launched the Māori Maps website, www.maorimaps.com 

The site dynamically delivers maps, photographs and information about the tribal marae of Te Tai Tokerau/Northland and Tāmaki/Auckland.

It provides a portal to over 170 marae through the North.

www.maorimaps.com is the first stage of a long-term project to revitalise links between marae, descendants and visitors.

Navigating via an interactive map or quick searches, users can easily locate a marae, get directions, see photos from the gateway and access key information.

The site launch represents five years’ work to establish the venture, attract support and research around the North.

Paul Tapsell and Rereata Makiha founded Te Potiki National Trust in 2006 with the aim of reconnecting young urban Māori – the ‘potiki’ generation – to their home communities and elders.

Marae are the beneficiaries of work by the Māori Maps team.

Tapsell, now professor of Māori Studies at the University of Otago, led the research across the North, accompanied by photographer Krzysztof Pfeiffer, kaumātua Renata Tane, and Rereata Makiha.


“Our marae are places where issues have been resolved for generations. They are central to our identity, which is grounded in ancestral landscapes.

“In recent times our potiki – the young generation – have been growing up away from marae, and as our elders die, our rich traditions, dialects and practices are dying with them.

“The Māori Maps team hopes to be the beginning of a solution, providing a pathway to marae that will benefit all New Zealand.

“It seeks to create a sustainable response to a real crisis: reconnection of new generations of Māori to their tribal identity, and sustaining our marae.”

The site fills a need for a portal that allows easy connection to marae at no cost to iwi, hapū or whānau, and will allow them access to store images and records online.

“We are committed to ongoing contact with runanga (tribal boards) and marae to keep the content and website features up to date,” Tapsell said.

Māori Maps has been funded by the Tindall Foundation, FoRST and the ASB Community Trust, with support from the universities of Auckland (James Henare Māori Research Centre, and Business School via Icehouse/SPARK and Otago (Te Tumu School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies), and Chapman Tripp. 

The Māori Maps team is planning its next field research in Bay of Plenty, Otago, Southland and Waikato.

Further features are under development for the site, not least a Te Reo Māori version, iPad and iPhone compatibility, and a layer of mapping of all marae in each runanga and iwi grouping.

– ENDS –  

For an interview, contact:
 Paul Tapsell, Director, 021 279 8677, paora@maorimaps.com
For Te Reo interviews, contact:
Rereata Makiha, 021 190 1379, ral.makiha@paradise.net.nz 
For further information, contact:
Peter Dowling, Kaihautu, 027 614 8993, pita@maorimaps.com
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