Winners announced for Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize for Creative Science Writing

The two winning entries in the Royal Society of New Zealand Manhire Prize for Creative Writing were announced on Wednesday night with Bridget Stocker from Wellington being awarded the fiction prize and Joanna Wojnar from Auckland winning the non-fiction category.

They were each presented with $2500 at the New Zealand Research Honours event hosted by the Royal Society of New Zealand at Te Papa in Wellington. Their winning entries will be published in the Listener.

The theme of this year’s competition was ‘Chemical World’ and was chosen to coincide with the 2011 International Year of Chemistry. Entrants took their inspiration from the Vincent O’Sullivan quote “I unhem creation a little, to work out the stitch”.

Both winning writers are chemists and have PhDs, with Dr Bridget Stocker working at the Malaghan Institute of Medical Research in Wellington and Dr Joanna Wojnar at The University of Auckland.

Stocker’s winning fiction piece, Radium – A Love Story, is about world famous chemist Marie Curie and told from her point of view. About her story Stocker says: “I felt compelled to write this story given that I’d taken part in the Marie Curie lecture series by the Royal Society of New Zealand, and then been featured on the cover of a chemistry magazine celebrating the life of Marie Curie. That said, I almost didn’t enter because I was running out of time, but I’m glad that I did!”

In the non-fiction category Wojnar’s winning piece is entitled 100% Chemical Free and is about the misuse of the term ‘chemical free’. In it she asks the question ‘When exactly did chemistry become synonymous with poison, and chemical with toxic?’

Wojnar says: “My writing so far has been solely scientific publications in my field. The competition entry therefore was a change in pace for me, but it was quite fun to write as it’s one of my pet peeves. The other one is the misuse of the word ‘organic’, but that’s the topic of another article!”

The Manhire Prize for Creative Science Writing is an annual competition organised by the Royal Society of New Zealand in association with the New Zealand Listener magazine and the International Institute of Modern Letters at Victoria University of Wellington, headed by Professor Bill Manhire.

The judge, Jo Randerson, is a Wellington-based writer, theatre maker and cross media artist.

The two winning entries will be published in the New Zealand Listener and are currently on the Royal Society of New Zealand’s website together with all 21 shortlisted entries: at www.royalsociety.org.nz

Read the winning entries at http://www.royalsociety.org.nz/programmes/competitions/manhire-prize/2011/

Here are Jo Randerson’s comments on the entries submitted and the winners:

Fiction category, winning entry is “Radium – A Love Story” by Bridget Stocker

“There was a clear thematic to this year’s fiction entries, and it stems from the evocative terminology which colours the world of chemistry. Reactions, bonds, lone pairs – many of the stories were based around relationships, which is totally in keeping with the chemist’s theme. How does this element relate to that one? Does it attract, repel, share electrons or fall into a stable or unstable structure? It was a stable structure that I looked for amongst the contenders for the prize. There were some lovely ideas and concepts in the shortlist, but with short fiction we need to feel a well-shaped ride.

“The winning entry took a direct approach by setting itself right in the heart of Curie’s world, and impressed with its simplicity and poetry. It took me to a new world which is now a permanent part of my consciousness.”

Non-fiction category, winning entry is “100% Chemical Free” by Joanna Wojnar

“As for the non-fiction, again there were some strong entries. Above all, I sought a cohesive argument and writing that flowed easily from idea to idea, as well as thorough and notated research.

“The winning essay has the clearest and most interesting argument – that the terms ‘natural’ and ‘chemical’ have become un-necessarily polarised. It’s a relevant and timely thesis to consider, it speaks to the world we are familiar with, it is a defender of chemistry. The writing is strongly voiced and conveys its points easily and convincingly.”

 
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