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Posters

Take a look at our new downloadable posters. You can print and display these to show your support for creative rights and the local book sector.

We’re pleased to have two, bold, beautiful Creative Rights = Creative Reads posters.

These A3 printable posters are another great way to help spread the word that creative rights fuel Aotearoa New Zealand books, and are critical for our local book sector.

If you’d like to use these to show your organisation’s support, please click each image below to download a printable version. Next, print and display!

These are also hosted on our Why Creative Rights page alongside sharable social media message tiles.

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Jason Kay Jason Kay

Fresh batch of stories

We’ve been busy talking to people who write, publish, design, promote, sell, read and love local books. The result is a fresh crop of stories on this site.

We’ve been busy talking to people who write, publish, design, promote, sell, read and love local books. The result is a fresh crop of stories on this site!  

Authors Dame Fiona KidmanNicky Pellegrino, librarian Neil Johnstone, literary agent Nadine Rubin Nathan and author, illustrator and book designer Vasanti Unka share stories that touch on personal moments in reading, writing and creating lives. 

These stories highlight how important books written and published here in Aotearoa New Zealand are, and the significance creative rights have in keeping the pages of the local book sector turning. Read the full set here.

Three things you can do to support the Creative Rights = Creative Reads campaign: 

  1. Read Stella’s Story

  2. Download and share our message tiles (click the link at the foot of this page

  3. Follow @CreativeReadsNZ on FacebookInstagram and Twitter 

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Jason Kay Jason Kay

Welcome

We’re putting creative rights and their importance — for the local book sector and the country — in the spotlight. 

We’re putting creative rights and their importance — for the local book sector and the country — in the spotlight. 

So, what can you do to support the creative rights of the people who make books here in Aotearoa? First, find out why creative rights are vital. Explore the Creative Rights = Creative Reads website, read Stella’s Story to find out why creative rights are so important for authors, publishers — and the rest of Aotearoa. And find out more, over on the About Us page.

Take a look at Our Stories. Here you’ll find personal stories from authors, publishers, booksellers and readers. Read about how Becky Manawatu felt holding a copy of Auē, her first book and winner of the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction 2020, for the very first time. Hear from an Avonside Girls’ High School student about being inspired by poet, scholar and author of Mophead (winner of the 2020 Margaret Mahy Book of the Year) Dr Selina Tusitala Marsh. And more. These stories touch on moments in reading, writing, and creating lives that highlight how important our local books are. Others show the significance creative rights hold in keeping the pages of our homegrown Aotearoa books turning. All of them are worth a good read. 

Over the coming months we’ll be releasing these on social media. We’ll also be busy collecting interesting new stories too.

Follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter and share the story we post there each week.

Download and share our social tiles from the link at the foot of the Why Creative Rights page and stay tuned!

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