
Kataraina
Becky Manawatu
(Author)This title will be released on:
Sep 16, 2025
Description
"[A] devastating, beautifully written tale imbued with Maori culture and language."
--Gregory Brown, The New York Times for Auē
The much-awaited follow-up to the award-winning international bestseller Auē.
In Auē, eight-year-old Ārama was taken by his brother, Taukiri, to live with Kat and Stu at the farm in Kaikōura, setting in motion the ensuing tragedy, which resulted in Stu's death. Aunty Kat was at the center of events, but, silenced by abuse, her voice was absent from the story.
In Kataraina, Kat and her whānau take over the telling. As one, the family recounts her childhood and the time when she first began to feel the greenness of the swamp in her veins--the swamp that holds her tears and the tears of generations of tīpuna that came before her; the swamp on the land owned by Stu that has been growing since the day he was killed.
Unflinching in its portrayal of intergenerational trauma and violence, tender in its harnessing of the hope that future generations represent, Kataraina is a stunning novel that confirms Becky Manawatu as one of the most talented and powerful writers working in Aotearoa/New Zealand today.
Product Details
Publisher | Scribe Us |
Publish Date | September 16, 2025 |
Pages | 288 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781964992181 |
Dimensions | N/A |
About the Author
Becky Manawatu (Ngāi Tahu, Ngāti Māmoe, Waitaha) is a West Coast author and journalist. She was born in Nelson and grew up in Waimangaroa, living now in Westport with her family. Her debut novel, Auē, won Aotearoa's leading fiction prizes and became one of the country's all-time fiction bestsellers.
Reviews
"The narrative is confident and assured in its structure ... Throughout the book, a third person perspective allows for a chorus of whānau, past and present, to tell their story ... The natural environment cradles the narrative and our characters as Manawatu's effortless figurative language is intertwined with the languages of science: lush ecology, resources and knowledge sits in the deep fabric of the environment."
--Jenna Todd, The Spinoff
"Kataraina is a refined and evocative novel written with such hospitable, attentive delicacy, steeped in the natural world ... Manawatu's writing is as intensely beautiful as it is diamond hard."
--Kiran Dass, The Spinoff
"The dialog is outstanding. You can hear these people walking around the pages, too ... There are numerous times when Manawatu ramps up the volume and intensity of her prose, electrifies it. Kataraina is the work of a major writer who could have stuck with a single storyline to create a major novel but had other things on her Mind."
--Steve Braunias, Newsroom
Kataraina is less plot-driven than Auē, but has more structural and narrative depth. The two books are intrinsically intertwined in a way that strengthens them both ... Kataraina gets under the hood of the culture of domestic violence, and lays it bare. This is all achieved with an ethereal vibe that seems like it ought to be incongruous with what Kat endures, but still works very well.'
--Lauren Keenan, Newsroom
"Manawatu's second novel solidifies her powerful voice and astute observational prowess."
--Denizen
"It's billed as a sequel, but it's not a straightforward continuation of the narrative. Rather, the action moves across both time and space -- to moments before, during and after the events of its predecessor ... Kataraina is a rewarding novel that I feel will continue to reveal itself. It also ends with laughter -- a 'cool-water laughter' -- which feels like a well-deserved ending to a saga wrought with so much tragedy."
--Jordan Tricklebank, Māori Literature Blog
"Kataraina is breathtaking, swirling around a repeating incident, given form by the collective memories of members of the Te Au family ... Kataraina is extremely tense in places, with its constant threat of violence, but it is also full of the love and support people, and the land, can extend ... The novel has a chaotic structure that is easily navigable, with its strong recurring themes."
--Alysontheblog
Praise for Auē:
"Auē' is the Maori word for a howling cry, and this layered work weaves a striking tapestry of fierce love and unflinching violence worthy of its poetic title ... Manawatu excels at enriching her characters and story lines with heartbreaking detail ... [A] devastating, beautifully written tale imbued with Maori culture and language."
--Gregory Brown, The New York Times
"The word auē is a Maori verb to cry, howl, groan, wail, bawl and yes, yes, yes, yes and yes, you may do all of these things when reading Becky Manawatu's incredibly assured debut novel. Small word, big emotions--and the perfect title for a book that deals in deceptively simple narration and oceanic feeling ... Manawatu elicits compassion from ugly places, and threads through redemptive spiritual beauty, and innocence, too, via alternating voices."
--Lucy Clark, The Guardian
"Much has been made of the violence in this novel ... [but in] so many ways, Auē is quite different ... more hopeful and tender ... In bringing to the page characters who maim, but also characters who love fiercely, Manawatu has had to enter the aching heart of this story and bring her characters back from dark places. Auē has done well because it is expertly crafted, but also because it has something indefinable: enthralling, puzzling, gripping and familiar, yet otherworldly."
--Tina Makereti, The Guardian
"[Manawatu's] prose is as changeable as the ocean: fluid most of the time, choppy and fragmented during intense moments. Each narrator contributes a unique perspective, their voices weaving together to form a coherent, devastating tale ... Auē is a novel about how trauma can spread from one generation to the next, and how it is never too late for second chances."
--Eileen Gonzalez, Foreword Reviews
"There is something so assured and flawless in the delivery of the writing voice that is almost like acid on the skin."
--Tara June Winch, author of The Yield, and co-judge of the 2020 Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction
"Auē is a heartbreaking yet gripping drama ... Despite the misery faced by its characters, the book maintains a sense of hope ... [Auē] stands out for its stark yet careful approach to depicting confronting and uncomfortable subjects. It's reminiscent of Douglas Stuart's Shuggie Bain and Romy Ash's Floundering in its exploration of tragedy through the innocent eyes of a child."
--Books+Publishing
"[Auē's] strengths emerge partly through an unwillingness to flinch at bleakness, partly through the depth of emotion, and ultimately the resilience it also portrays."
--The Sydney Morning Herald
"Auē means to cry or wail, which is at the heart of this novel. It gnaws away at you, it consumes you; you can't stop thinking about it, trying to understand it, trying to find hope ... a fitting title for this book as there is an underlying sense of sorrow that binds the generations together. It details intergenerational trauma and shares a journey on how this trauma can impact future generations and leave unseen scars breaking the essence and spirit of a person. Manawatu weaves the sorrowful call throughout the book, but there are just enough pockets of hope to allow the reader to imagine a better future for all the characters."
--Wiki Mulholland, Emirates Literature Foundation
"It's about the intergenerational nature of this violence, how ruinous lack of tenderness breeds further ruin. The violence is strongly gendered, the men incapable of expressing themselves except through fists ... If lack of tenderness is the cause of all this suffering, aroha, love, is the answer. Throughout Auē love comes to the rescue, even if it is often thwarted. Culture and belonging are key to this love ... The writing is cinematic, the dialog heightened, the action coming in staccato bursts."
--James Whitmore, The Library is Open
"Auē is a vivid and profound work."
--Jessica Oliver, Canberra Times
"Read this book if you love great fiction and want to discover a powerful new voice from New Zealand."
--Emily Paull, The AU Review
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