Poetry connects Aotearoa on 22 August
The full Calendar of Events for Phantom Billstickers National Poetry Day 2025 is officially live today —
unveiling a vibrant and wide-reaching celebration set to sweep Aotearoa on Friday 22 August. With over 110
events confirmed across the motu, from city slams to rural rhyme nights, this year’s line-up proves poetry is
thriving in every corner of the country — and is more accessible than ever.
'Poetry is set to erupt across the country — in schools, pubs, galleries, libraries, and city streets,' says Richard
Pamatatau, poet and spokesperson for the New Zealand Book Awards Trust Te Ohu Tiaki i Te Rau Hiringa, the
body behind this popular initiative, now in its 28th year. 'The diversity and ambition of the planned events show
that poetry is as vital and resonant as ever.'
From magnetic poetry walls to hip hop gigs, typewriter poems to inter-arts showcases, 2025 regional organisers
have pulled out all the stops. 'We invited event hosts to go bold – and they absolutely have,' says National
Coordinator Gill Hughes. 'It’s especially exciting to see so many first-time organisers joining us this year, with
events stretching from Kerikeri to Invercargill and everything in between.'
An excellent example of this growing creativity is the new nationwide Great NZ Poetry Display-Off Challenge,
with dozens of libraries and bookshops already signed up to create dazzling poetry displays. 'It’s so heartening
to see school libraries leading the charge,' says Gill. 'Our rangatahi are hungry for poetry, and it’s coming to
meet them.'
This month marks the launch of Phantom Billstickers’ 2025 Poem Poster Season — a bold initiative from
steadfast sponsor and long-time champion of taking poetry to the streets. Verses by leading local poets —
including this year’s Ockham New Zealand Book Award poetry finalists, Emma Neale, C.K.Stead, Robert
Sullivan and Richard von Sturmer, as well as Ben Brown, Glenn Colquhoun and newcomer Taylor Grace, will
appear in public spaces nationwide. 'You don’t need to open a book to feel the impact of poetry,' says Phantom
CEO Robin McDonnell. 'A poem on the street can stop you in your tracks. As our founder Jim Wilson says:
‘You’re putting up words straight from the heart.’ That’s what National Poetry Day is all about.'
While Phantom’s posters bring poems directly to the public, the NPD Competition Calendar invites people to dive
in and create poetry of their own. Celebrating voices across generations, the calendar includes popular
favourites like the Poetry Aotearoa Yearbook Student Poetry Competition and Poets XYZ — alongside new
opportunities such as Toitū He Kāinga, which invites poets who whakapapa Māori to explore relationships with the built environment. There’s even a Blackout Poetry competition using pages from vintage Forest & Bird
magazines.
A special event at the National Library on Wednesday 20 August will mark the close of Chris Tse’s powerful
term as New Zealand Poet Laureate, with the next Laureate announced on Phantom Billstickers National Poetry
Day — Friday 22 August.
Also on Wednesday 20 August, poet and 2025 Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry finalist Robert Sullivan
will lead an online writing workshop presented in partnership with Australia’s Poetry Month. Participants will
explore lyric voice, ancestral waka, and ecological connection.
“The wider the reach of poetry, the better. It’s a public health measure!” Emma Neale, winner of the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry at the 2025 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards.