| Witi Ihimaera - Māori (New Zealand people) - 2004 - 244 pages
As soon as she saw it, Miro Mananui knew what it was. An owl, its cryptic colours flaring with the dawn. Who has the owl come for? Whose name has it cried out to Miro Mananui ... | |
| Witi Ihimaera - Juvenile Fiction - 2003 - 178 pages
As her beloved grandfather, chief of the Māori tribe of Whangara, New Zealand, struggles to lead in difficult times and to find a male successor, young Kahu is developing a ... | |
| Witi Ihimaera - Fathers and sons - 1989 - 228 pages
Focusing on the relationship between a young man and his father, this is a moving account of death - but also an affirmation of life. It describes, simply and affectionately ... | |
| Witi Ihimaera - Biography & Autobiography - 1998 - 300 pages
A unique insight into childhood stories from early this century through to recent times; from the country and, increasingly from the city; from those whoc had a totally Maori ... | |
| Witi Ihimaera - Maori (New Zealand people) - 1995 - 528 pages
"... edition collects together ... the stories of Pounamu Pounamu (1972) and The new net goes fishing (1977) together with a new collection of stories ... Kingfisher come home ... | |
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