Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Potiki
Potiki | Patricia Grace
14 posts | 8 read | 24 to read
In a small coastal community threatened by developers who would ravage their lands it is a time of fear and confusion - and growing anger. The prophet child Tokowaru-i-te-Marama shares his people's struggles against bulldozers and fast money talk. When dramatic events menace the marae, his grief and rage threaten to burst beyond the confines of his twisted body. His all-seeing eye looks forward to a strange and terrible new dawn. Patrica Grace's second novel is a work of spellbinding power in which the myths of older times are inextricably woven into the political realities of today. Also available as an eBook
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Bookworm54
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image
Pickpick

This was my pick for #NewZealand #FoodAndLit

It was an interesting look at a Māori tribe trying to keep their ancestral land when developers are trying to convince them to leave. Things get out of hand when the developers realise they can‘t be bought. I don‘t know much about the culture so it was a nice insight into some of the customs.

Catsandbooks Fantastic 🇳🇿 2mo
Texreader I‘m learning an awful lot about the Māori with my New Zealand books, too 2mo
Reggie I love this book soo much. 2mo
40 likes3 comments
quote
shawnmooney
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

19 likes1 stack add
quote
shawnmooney
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

Reggie I love this book! 2y
20 likes1 comment
quote
shawnmooney
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

Suet624 Interesting advice. 2y
Reggie I love this book! 2y
22 likes2 comments
review
Currey
Grace: Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image
Pickpick

#readaroundtheworld #newzealand A people of the land and sea narrate stories about their place in this world as if sharing around a fire. Thru the repetition and overlap of multiple voices we learn a dark and sad tale of fighting against the development of their land, and the struggle not to lose their young to anger and fear. I enjoyed being with these characters. As Grace writes from within her Maori culture, I was only a brief visitor.

Reggie I loved this book! 3y
rockpools Lovely review. 3y
20 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
Reggie
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image
Pickpick

This book...😭. It is a simple yet poetic telling of a Maori community that must stay strong in knowing who they are as a people as someone only known as Dollarman threatens their existence wanting to buy their land for development. Published in 1986 it feels very relevant as many cultures are being displaced and their histories erased. Thank you @Centique for this book. Easily a favorite of the year.

Centique Oh I‘m so glad you liked it! It‘s really stayed with me as well this one 😍 4y
Tanisha_A Sounds very interesting. Great review, Reg! 🙂 4y
Reggie @Tanisha_A 😊It was sooo good! Thanks! 4y
Josee.lit.a.lu.et.lira Thanks for the share. 📚➕ for my read the 🌎 challenge. 4y
70 likes11 stack adds4 comments
quote
Reggie
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

From a Maori man named Hemi thinking of his past and present.

51 likes1 stack add
quote
Reggie
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

I could finish this tonight but I think it would be better if I don‘t. This book is so tender and beautiful so far.

Tanisha_A Ooh, that's some imagery 4y
Reggie It‘s like this all over. @Tanisha_A 4y
Lindy I love this book. Nice to see excerpts. 😊 4y
Reggie @Lindy 😊It‘s a beautiful book. 4y
50 likes1 stack add4 comments
review
Centique
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image
Pickpick

This is a 1986 NZ classic that I had put off reading and kick myself for not getting to sooner. There‘s a lot of learning in here for me - I spent a lot of time looking things up. Many elements of tikanga (Maori cultural practices) which I knew of roughly, were here given in context and with depth so I could understand why and how they all tied together. This is a powerful story of a small community up against unscrupulous developers. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Centique If a non-kiwi asked me for the best Patricia Grace novel I would probably say her later novel, Tu first - it‘s much more subtle. This is over thirty years old and her writing has grown but boy this is POWERFUL. The characters of Mary and Toko and Granny are written with such heart that they‘re unforgettable. 5y
CarolynM I'm stacking Tu🙂 5y
See All 6 Comments
Centique @CarolynM yay I hope you like it! It‘s simply told but has great depth. 😍 5y
Kalalalatja My bf‘s brother in law is Maori, and I really want to learn more about their history and culture, so both these books sounds really good! Thanks for sharing 🙌 5y
Centique @Kalalalatja oh that‘s excellent. I‘m sure he‘ll be very impressed if you‘ve read Patricia Grace! 👍💕 5y
80 likes2 stack adds6 comments
quote
Lindy
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

The gift has not been taken away because gifts are legacies that once given cannot be taken away. They may pass from hand to hand, but once held they are always yours.

Lynnsoprano What a beautiful hibiscus! 6y
Lindy @Lynnsoprano It‘s eye catching, isn‘t it? The whole shrub is in bloom and I couldn‘t resist stepping onto private property to take a quick photo. 6y
Godmotherx5 Oh my! 6y
batsy Hibiscus! My favourite flower. 6y
Lindy @batsy Yay! 6y
54 likes5 comments
quote
Lindy
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

After a long time someone said that the house had gone but that we still had people, and we had the ground. “And you build from people and you build from the ground.” But the words did not give comfort. No one else spoke.
Instead we began to sing, which is a way of saving your soul, or the centre of you.

Oryx This looks familiar. Is it in Te Papa? 6y
Lindy @Oryx It‘s in the Auckland museum. 6y
53 likes3 comments
review
Lindy
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image
Pickpick

A fabulous, moving novel about a group of Maori people & what happens when developers want access to their land. Deceptively simple writing style, finely crafted & told in multiple viewpoints. I was aided in my understanding by having previous exposure to elements of Maori culture & language. There were also word translations handwritten in the copy I read. The characters, setting & story remain vivid in my mind. ❤️ #Indigenous #NZauthor

48 likes1 stack add
quote
Lindy
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

We had become tellers, listeners, readers, writers, enactors and collectors of stories. And games are stories too, not just swallowers of time, or buds without fruit.

ClairesReads Love this book 6y
Lindy @ClairesReads Yay! I gave it 5 out of 5 stars on goodreads. 6y
ClairesReads @Lindy well deserved stars- it‘s a great one 6y
45 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
Lindy
Potiki | Patricia Grace
post image

I‘m reading a deceased friend‘s copy of this #Indigenous #NZauthor classic. She taught this text in high school English classes. I feel like she‘s at my shoulder with her helpful marginalia: Maori words and customs are explained. I also get a heads up that chapter 5 is “really important” and “explains the characters.” 😁

ReadingEnvy How wonderful to have her marginalia! 6y
Bibliogeekery Wow! What a touching way to connect with your friend! 6y
Bloomingjen {{{hugs}}} very cool 6y
See All 9 Comments
Lindy @ReadingEnvy @Bibliogeekery @Bloomingjen The moral of this anecdote is to go ahead and write in the books you care about. 😉 6y
batsy I agree with the moral of this anecdote ☺️❤️ 6y
LeahBergen You are so right about the moral! ❤️ 6y
UrsulaMonarch Love this post & comments! 👩‍❤️‍👩 6y
51 likes2 stack adds9 comments