Fiona Kidman Popular Books

Fiona Kidman Biography & Facts

Dame Fiona Judith Kidman (née Eakin; born 26 March 1940) is a New Zealand novelist, poet, scriptwriter and short story writer. She grew up in Northland, and worked as a librarian and a freelance journalist early in her career. She began writing novels in the late 1970s, with her works often featuring young women subverting society's expectations, inspired by her involvement in the women's liberation movement. Her first novel, A Breed of Women (1979), caused controversy for this reason but became a bestseller in New Zealand. Over the course of her career, Kidman has written eleven novels, seven short-story collections, two volumes of her memoirs and six collections of poetry. Her works explore women's lives and issues of social justice, and often feature historical settings. Kidman is an influential figure in New Zealand literature and has been active in New Zealand's literary community, including by serving as the president of the New Zealand Society of Authors and the New Zealand Book Council and as a creative writing tutor. She has won a number of prestigious awards over the course of her career, including a Prime Minister's Award for Literary Achievement and the top award for fiction at the New Zealand Book Awards on two occasions. Early life and career Kidman was born in Hāwera on 26 March 1940. She was the only child of Flora (née Small) and Hugh Eakin, and as a newborn baby she was briefly hospitalised with a milk allergy. After World War Two, her parents used their savings to put a deposit on a cheap block of land in Kerikeri. They stayed for a while on a British army soldier's farm in Kerikeri, where her parents worked as servants for the family, but later moved into an army hut on their land at the end of Darwin Road, where they lived for seven years. She attended Kerikeri Primary School followed by Northland College, where she has said she won the school English prize at age 13. After her father received an inheritance, the three of them moved to a farm in Waipu. She attended Waipu District High School for two years. After leaving high school at age 15, she worked at first in the local drapery store and subsequently as a librarian in Rotorua. She married Ian Kidman in 1960, and the couple had two children. He was awarded an MNZM for his service working with landmine victims in Cambodia, and died in 2017. She began working as a freelance journalist in the 1960s, and was mentored by Bruce Mason and William Austin in theatre and radio theatre. In 1970 the couple moved to Wellington with their children where she worked as a writer, screenwriter and television producer. When asked why she became a writer, she has said: I married when I was twenty, had my first child when I was twenty-two, and we were poor. I had stopped work when my daughter was born, because that was the expectation in the 1960s. I offered myself to the local paper as a book reviewer and they took me up on it. I wrote scores, maybe hundreds of reviews. I was offered more work and it just grew from there. Literary career Novels Kidman's first novel, A Breed of Women, was published in 1979. It was a feminist novel about a young woman defying society's expectations during the 1970s, with roots in Kidman's involvement in the New Zealand women's liberation movement. Due to its controversial subject matter and depictions of sex, it was banned by some schools and libraries, which led to increased sales. Kidman was termed "filthy Fiona" by some commentators. It was followed by Mandarin Summer (1981) and Paddy's Puzzle (1983, also published as In a Clear Light in the United States in 1985), both narrated by young girls growing up in New Zealand. Her historical novel, The Book of Secrets (1987), followed three generations of women from Nova Scotia to Australia to Waipu, and the influence on their lives of the preacher Norman McLeod, a real historical figure. In the 1990s her works continued to deal with serious subject matter: True Stars (1990) was a crime novel criticising New Zealand's right-wing economic policies in the 1980s, described by academic Terry Sturm as the "most important political novel" in New Zealand in this period, and Ricochet Baby (1996) was about the impacts of postnatal depression on the sufferer and her family. Kidman's novels often feature female main characters, a realistic style, and lower-middle-class families. They explore the lives of women and of those who are outsiders in conformist societies. She is deeply interested in issues of social justice. Her novel Songs from the Violet Cafe (2003) was set in both Rotorua and Cambodia. A review in The Dominion Post described it as "contain[ing] much potential sensation — domestic violence, illicit sexual connections, deaths and disappearances, and the desolation and venality of a country at war — but there's also a wry humour, every intense emotion and extreme event filtered through Kidman's cool precise prose". The Captive Wife (2005) is a historical novel about the kidnapping of Elizabeth Guard in the 1830s, while The Infinite Air (2013) is a fictional account of the life of aviator Jean Batten. As part of the writing process for The Infinite Air she flew in a Tiger Moth plane to have a better understanding of Batten's experiences. Her tenth novel, All Day at the Movies (2016), is a family saga focussed on the life of women and changes in social attitudes across 55 years in New Zealand. This Mortal Boy (2018) is about Paddy Black or the Jukebox Killer, a 20-year-old Irishman who was convicted of murder after a fight with another young man at a milk bar in 1955. Kidman has said the book emerged from "an interest in how some young men live their lives, believing they are immortal, yet one terrible mistake can change everything for them and their families"; she had subsequently come across an article about Black and remembered the outbreak of moral panic about teenagers in the 1950s in New Zealand following the Mazengarb Report: "I knew I was hooked, that I couldn't get away from Albert, or Paddy, as he was known. I knew I would write a novel." Craig Sisterson in the New Zealand Listener said of the novel: "This is a tale about violent acts that is infused with humanity and compassion. And although it may be set more than half a century ago, there's a lot here that seems relevant to our modern times." Other work In addition to her novels, Kidman has published seven short story collections, including Mrs Dixon and Friends (1982), Unsuitable Friends (1988) and The Foreign Woman (1993), and six poetry collections, including Honey and Bitters (1975), On the Tightrope (1978), Going to the Chathams: Poems 1977–84 (1985) and Wakeful Nights: Poems Selected and New (1991). Her poems are often autobiographical in nature and feature feminist themes. She has published two volumes of her memoirs: At the End of Darwin Road (2008) and Beside the Dark Pool (2009). Other works include the editing of several fiction anthologies and works fo.... Discover the Fiona Kidman popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Fiona Kidman books.

Best Seller Fiona Kidman Books of 2024

  • The Random Reader synopsis, comments

    The Random Reader

    Various Authors

    From fifteen of New Zealand's finest shortfiction practitioners come stories to delight, amuse and move. These stories have been gathered from a range of titles, published in rec...

  • Ricochet Baby synopsis, comments

    Ricochet Baby

    Fiona Kidman

    A moving novel, with intelligent and compassionate insight into postnatal depression and the complexities of relationships. 'When Roberta falls pregnant her whole family is filled...

  • A Needle in the Heart synopsis, comments

    A Needle in the Heart

    Fiona Kidman

    A collection of six compelling stories linked by a central issue in the lives of the main characters, the defining incident that shapes their futures. The disappearance of a brot...