The Story of Suzanne Aubert

Author(s): Munro, Jessie

NZ History/Society

Originally published 1996. This beautifully written story of a radical nun who founded a religious congregation sold thousands of copies when it won the Book of the Year award in the Montana Book Awards in 1997. Unusually, it simultaneously won the E. H. McCormick Award for the best first hook of non—fiction. Suzanne Aubert grew up in a French provincial family in the mid-nineteenth century. Lyon’s Catholic missionary spirit brought her to live with Maori girls in war-anxious 186Os Auckland. She nursed Maori and Pakeha in Hawke’s Bay as the settler population swelled in the 1870s. In the 1880s and 1890s, living up the Whanganui River at Jerusalem, she set up New Zealand’s home-grown Catholic congregation, published a significant Maori text, broke in a hill farm, manufactured medicines, and gathered babies and children through the family—fracturing years of economic depression. The turn of the century sent her windswept skirts through the streets of the capital city. There she would he a constant sign of political commitment and caring for people ‘of all creeds and none’ until she died in 1926.


Product Information

Winner of Montana New Zealand Book of the Year Award 1997.

General Fields

  • : 9781877242427
  • : Bridget Willaims Books Limited
  • : UNKNOWN
  • : 01 May 2009
  • : New Zealand
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Munro, Jessie
  • : PB
  • : 2nd Re-issue
  • : English
  • : 255.97092
  • : 496pp
  • : photographs