Hi,
I read with interest your post. I'm a NZ author (Diana Noonan). Do Google my name to check out I'm real!
After 25 years of publishing mainly for young people, I'm now engaged in social documentary for adults and have my first book in this genre coming out with Otago University Press in 2016.
My second project is a collection of interviews with NZ women (I'll call them subjects for the purpose of this email) who have made the decision to live abroad in order to be with their non-NZ husbands. For each of the subjects I'm working with, this is how the process goes:
The subject and I talk together by Skype for 1-2 hours, talking about whatever comes up, for example: "How do find the environment where you live?" How is it for your children, living in Morocco?"
I record the interview, shape it into a text of around 1500-2000 words, and send it to the subject. It goes without saying that nothing would ever be published that the subject did not feel comfortable with.
With my last book (which is a collection of interviews with 28 women from the remote Catlins region where I live), I collaborated with a a professional photographer. With this current book, I'm working with women from all over the world so the book will be illustrated in 'scrapbook' design ie with the subjects own snapshots of things such as special family events - births, birthdays, wedding, festivals, or a wedding certificate (or equivalent) - or a page from a passport. For this reason, subjects will need to feel comfortable supplying copies of personal memorabilia - nothing professional, just the sort of thing you might have floating around in a bottom draw. I am also considering commissioning from my husband (who is an artist) a portrait of each subject.
I should make it clear from the start that I am not able to offer a fee for your time. I am a professional writer but books in this genre are not my 'day work'. Due to the impossibility of a realistic return for my time, I treat them as a hobby. The publisher is likewise dependent on publishing grants from the NZ Arts Council. But it's good to know that such work, although not commercially viable, is taken seriously enough that highly regarded, independent publishers want to publish them. Books like my social documentaries are seen to be contributing to the body of work that helps New Zealanders understand who they are and what their place is in the world.
I do hope you might be interested in taking part in this new project. Your family make-up certainly fits the bill.
Kind regards
Diana Noonan
Moderated by
kenjee 9 years ago
Reason : Please do not share emails on the forum.