Patricia Grace (born August 17, 1937, Wellington, New Zealand) is a New Zealand writer who was a foundational figure in the rise and development of Māori fiction. Her work has been acclaimed for its depiction of Māori culture in general as well as Māori diversity, and she helped give a voice to her culture and to reveal to the larger world what it means to be Māori.
Born to a Māori father and a European mother, Grace identified herself as Māori and was affiliated with the Ngāti Toa, Ngāti Raukawa, and Te Āti Awa iwi (clans). She attended Wellington Teachers’ Training College and Victoria University of Wellington and began a career as a teacher of English as a second language. While teaching and raising her seven children, Grace joined a writing club and began to publish her stories. Her first book, Waiariki, and Other Stories (1975), presented a multiplicity of Māori voices, revealing much about Māori life and concerns. One of the first books by a Māori writer, it won a PEN/Hubert Church Award for best first book of fiction. Her next book was a novel, Mutuwhenua: The Moon Sleeps (1978), which examined a marriage between a Māori woman and a man of European descent (Pākehā).
She produced another collection of stories, The Dream Sleepers, and Other Stories (1980), before turning to children’s literature. A picture book on which Grace collaborated with Māori artist Robyn Kahukiwa, The Kuia and the Spider (1981) is a story about a weaving contest between a female elder (kuia) and a spider. Grace and Kahukiwa also collaborated on two further books: Wahine Toa: Women of Maori Myth (1984), a unique examination of the role of female figures in Māori legend; and Watercress Tuna and the Children of Champion Street (1984), another children’s book, about a magical eel and its gifts to a group of children. Her books were written in an English peppered with untranslated Māori words. They were later translated into Māori as well as other languages.
In 1984 Grace gave up teaching to become a full-time writer. She returned to adult fiction with the novel Potiki (1986)—about Māori respect and feeling for environment—which won the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction and other prizes. Another short-story collection, Electric City, and Other Stories (1987), followed.
The novel Cousins (1992), with its complex narrative structure, examines the vastly different experiences of three female Māori cousins brought up in different ways. Two years later her first three volumes of short stories were published together in Collected Stories, and a new volume of stories, The Sky People (1994) was issued. Both of Grace’s next novels, Baby No-Eyes (1998) and Dogside Story (2001), were set in small coastal villages and concerned community and intergenerational family relationships.
In 2003 Grace and her husband published a work of nonfiction, Earth, Sea, Sky: Images and Māori Proverbs from the Natural World of Aotearoa New Zealand, with photographs by Craig Potton. The novel Tu (2004) was inspired by Grace’s father’s service in New Zealand’s Māori Battalion during World War II. It is, among other things, a reflection on the irony of Māori soldiers fighting, as a Māori leader puts it, “for the people who had stolen their country.” Grace produced another collection of short stories, Small Holes in the Silence, in 2006 and another children’s book, Maraea and the Albatrosses, in 2008. The latter book was illustrated by her brother, Brian Gunson. Also in 2008 she won the Neustadt Prize.
A later work of nonfiction is Ned & Katina: A True Love Story (2009). It relates the true story of a Māori soldier who during World War II falls in love with, marries, and returns to New Zealand with the woman from Crete whose family rescues him. The novel Chappy (2015) follows a young man’s quest to learn more about his family’s history, including the remarkable story of his Māori grandmother and Japanese grandfather. In 2021 Grace published the memoir From the Centre: A Writer’s Life.