Ronald Hugh Morrieson

Author details

Born:
Jan. 29, 1922
Died:
Dec. 26, 1972

External links

Ronald Hugh Morrieson of [Hawera][1], Taranaki was a novelist and short story writer in the New Zealand vernacular. He earned his living as a musician and music teacher and [played in dance bands][2] throughout south Taranaki. He lived in Hawera all his life and this town appears (under other names) in his novels. He was a heavy drinker throughout his life and this contributed to his early death.

He wrote four novels, all of which have been adapted for the cinema: The Scarecrow 1963 ([The Scarecrow][3] 1982), Came A Hot Friday 1964 ([Came A Hot Friday][4] 1985), Predicament 1975 ([Predicament][5] 2010) and Pallet on the Floor 1976 ([Pallet on the Floor][6] 1984). Two short stories were published posthumously; Cross My Heart And Cut My Throat and The Chimney, both in 1974.

Morrieson enjoyed some success with his first novel which received good reviews in Australia but he struggled to publish his later novels. He lamented to [Maurice Shadbolt][7] in early 1972, “I hope I’m not another one of these poor buggers who get discovered when they’re dead”, only to die in obscurity in his small home town of Hawera.

During the early 1990s, Morrieson's house on the corner of Regent …

Books by Ronald Hugh Morrieson