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Kōrero: Fiction

Maori girl

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<em>Maori girl</em>

Noel Hilliard was a Pākehā writer of some importance in the 1960s, and his fiction was commercially successful in New Zealand. Relationships between Māori and Pākehā and entrenched racism were abiding concerns in his work. Hilliard's best-known book, Maori girl (1960), is the story of Netta Samuel, who moves from rural Taranaki to Wellington in search of better material prospects, as did so many of her peers in the post-war period. Life in the city is hard and Netta drifts from boarding house to boarding house, forging relationships with those she meets in similar circumstances, sometimes to her detriment. She gets pregnant and settles down with Arthur, a Pākehā man, in a slum, along with numerous other couples. When Arthur finds out the child is not his, he leaves Netta. Her story was continued in Maori woman (1974) and The glory and the dream (1978).

Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi

Penguin New Zealand

Reference: Noel Hilliard, Maori girl. London: Heinemann, 1960.

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Me pēnei te tohu i te whārang

Lydia Wevers, Fiction – Māori and Pacific writers and writing about Māori, Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, https://teara.govt.nz/mi/document/41952/maori-girl (accessed 4 June 2026).

He kōrero nā Lydia Wevers, i tāngia i te 20 June 2013, updated 1 August 2015.