Hannah (Pākehā) is an editor and writer living in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, also working in the public service. She was an editor for The Pantograph Punch from 2018–2020 and has also edited and produced illustrated non-fiction for Te Papa Press and Oxford University Press.
When the world is falling to pieces, sometimes you need to escape into something ridiculous. The Pantograph Punch team brings you our favourite bad TV.
August & September highlights across visual arts, books, music and fashion, from the Pantograph Punch team of writers and editors.
Novelists Pip Adam and Brannavan Gnanalingam discuss writing about trauma and how the narratives we tell ourselves compare to reality.
Our top picks from this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival programme, At Home – Online.
We take a moment to thank the handmade objects that brought us joy while stuck at home.
Gregory Kan thrives amid self-imposed constraints in his second poetry collection – but also tests the reader’s patience for abstracted gravitas. Hannah Newport-Watson reviews.
Contemporary Muslim poets whose work we love, admire or would like to read more of.
Forthcoming New Zealand poetry, fiction and non-fiction we’re excited about in 2019
Owning a stand-alone home is increasingly unaffordable. Hannah Newport-Watson asks if sharing property is the answer.
Hannah Newport-Watson talks to the duo behind LitCrawl and Lōemis about what it takes to create independent literary and arts festivals in Wellington.