Keith Newman (writer)

Keith Newman is a New Zealand author, freelance writer and producer. He has had five non-fiction titles published dealing with historical subjects including Māori prophet T. W. Ratana and the movement he founded, the early missionaries and their relationships with the Māori people and a history of the Internet in New Zealand.

Early years

Newman was raised in Feilding in the central North Island of New Zealand and trained as a reporter from the age of 17 working on newspapers in Palmerston North and Waipukurau before joining the NZBC as a radio and TV journalist. He spent two and a half years in Sydney managing and promoting rock bands before returning to Palmerston North in the late 1970s to start entertainment magazine Get Up 'n Go.

In 1981 he joined the news staff at Radio 2XS in Palmerston North where he produced a number of radio documentaries. He moved to Auckland in 1984 to work as a sub-editor on a weekly newspaper then went on to work as a feature writer and sub editor with Suburban Newspapers in 1986 before joining the Auckland Sun in 1988.

Author

After 20 years of research Reed published his work Ratana Revisited – An Unfinished Legacy,[1] the first work on the Ratana Church and movement for nearly 25 years. Two years later he was asked by Penguin, which took over Reed Publishing, to write a condensed and more focused version which was published as Ratana – The Prophet in 2009.[2] Newman also wrote the article in Te Ara, the New Zealand Government online encyclopaedia, about the Ratana movement.

In between he was commissioned by InternetNZ to write the history of the Internet in New Zealand. The resulting book Connecting the Clouds – The Internet in New Zealand (Activity Press 2008) is also published as a wiki and available free under a Creative Commons license.[3]

In 2009 Penguin published his book Bible & Treaty: Missionaries Among the Maori, since released in a second edition. The follow-up title Beyond Betrayal: Trouble in the Promised Land was published in September 2013.

Wordworx web and CDs

Newman has hosted one of the longest running free content sites in New Zealand, as the webmaster of the Wordworx site, and has been writing about telecommunications and technology since the dawn of the 1980s. Under the umbrella Wordworx he archives many of the articles and features he has written over the past 25 years, including the annual Digital lifestyle magazine Home Technology, distributed in hard copy format as a supplement to The Sunday Star-Times which he wrote and edited until 2012.

Newman also hosts articles on New Zealand music, and content from his rhythm 'n verse poetry CDs, Buzz Words from 1997 and Cleaning Out the Garage in 2002.

Rock from the edge

Newman has written produced and narrated over 20 programmes for Radio New Zealand National's Musical Chairs series, mainly dealing with pop and rock musicians from the period of the 1960s and 1970s, predominantly those who had recording success locally and toured offshore.

Environmental action

Newman is the chairman of the WOW (Walking on Water) lobby group, which is particularly concerned with coastal erosion in the Haumoana beach area where he lives.[4]

Awards

Publications

  • Ratana Revisited – An Unfinished Legacy (Raupo/Reed 2006) ISBN 9780790010571
  • Connecting the Clouds – the Internet in New Zealand, (Activity Press / InternetNZ 2008) ISBN 0958263442
  • Ratana the Prophet (Raupo-Penguin 2009) ISBN 9780143010975
  • Bible & Treaty: Missionaries Among the Maori (Penguin 2010)[9] ISBN 978-0143204084
  • Beyond Betrayal: Trouble in the Promised Land (Penguin 2013) ISBN 9780143570516

References

  1. "Ratana Revisited: An Unfinished Legacy – An Interview with Author Keith Newman" (PDF). Chrysalis Seed Trust. February 2008.
  2. Diamond, Paul (21 February 2009). "Politics and the prophet". The New Zealand Listener (3589). Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  3. Griffin, Peter (22 September 2008). "REVIEW: Connecting the Clouds". Science Media Centre. Royal Society of New Zealand. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  4. "Keith Newman: Cape Coast tired of 'poster boy' status". Hawke's Bay Today. 18 May 2019. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  5. "New Zealand Hi-Tech Awards | Previous Winners". hitech.org.nz. 2011. Archived from the original on 14 May 2012. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  6. "Radio New Zealand Media Releases : New Zealand Radio Awards 2007 – Radio New Zealand Winners". Radio New Zealand. 30 April 2007. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  7. "Qantas Media Awards 2004 – Print Results". scoop.co.nz. 16 May 2005. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  8. "2004 Winners – TUANZ". tuanz.org.nz. 25 August 2004. Archived from the original on 13 August 2007. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
  9. Price, Vicki (19 May 2012). "In God they did trust". Taranaki News Online. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
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