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Sargeson Prize winners

In 2025, we received 1164 entries in the Open Division and 306 in the Secondary Schools Division; a total of 1470 stories.

Open Division winners

First Place

鈥淣one of us met our nan. She died before we were born, and since then all we鈥檝e all been doing is fighting to figure out who the hell we are. I obsessed over Ishua鈥檚 choice not to offer me one of those precious things, and I obsessed over my own choice not to just take something.鈥

Becky Manawatu (Kawatiri Westport):

Becky Manawatu (K膩i Tahu, K膩ti Mamoe, Waitaha) is the award-winning writer of the novels 础耻脓 and Kataraina. 础耻脓 won the 2020 Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction as well as Best First Book at the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards. It also won the Ngaio Marsh Award the following year. Becky held the University of Otago鈥檚 Robert Burns Fellowship in 2021, where she worked on her second novel. She has written for The Spinoff, Newsroom and Pantograph Punch. She worked as a journalist for the Westport News, the smallest independent daily print paper in New Zealand. She is currently working on her third novel. She lives in Westport with her children and husband.

' (18 October 2025)

Photo credit: Stewart Nimmo

Second Place

鈥淲orry about yourself,鈥 Lance says, lighting a cigar and dismissing global economic and political disruption in a puff of smoke. He has cultivated a ZZ Top beard of late, and I contemplate whether careless flicking of ash might ignite him.鈥

Maria Wickens (Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington):

Maria Wickens won the 1993 Reed New Writers Fiction Award with her novel Left of Centre (Secker & Warburg 1994). Her latest novel Drown 鈥橢m Like Puppies was longlisted in the Michael Gifkins Award 2022. Her short fiction has appeared in Allium, Apricity Magazine, Chamber Magazine, Cobalt Review, Evening Street Review, Ghostlight Literary Magazine, Mystery Tribune, The Penmen Review, Press Pause Press, Skywatcher Press: Dead Unleashed, The Depths Unleashed Anthologies, and Writers Online (Runner Up Grand Flash 2024). Born in Masterton, Maria moved to the UK for nearly fifteen years before returning to Aotearoa with her husband and two children in 2010 where they make their home in Wellington.

(1 November 2025)

Third Place

鈥淲omen have leaky boundaries, the Australian voice said. We鈥檙e leaking energy, we鈥檙e leaking power. We鈥檙e here to show you how to hold a clean boundary.鈥

Kate Duignan (Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington):

Kate Duignan has published two novels. Her second, The New Ships, was shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction in 2019. She has published short fiction and poetry in various journals and anthologies, and has a recent essay in Landfall Strong Words 4. Kate holds the Sargeson Fellowship for 2025, and is working on a new novel set in Canada and New Zealand. In other years, Kate teaches fiction at the International Institute of Modern Letters, Te Herenga Waka Victoria University. She lives with her partner and three children in a windy part of P艒neke, overlooking Te Whanganui-a-Tara.

(8 November)

Photo credit: Ebony Lamb

Highly Commended

  • Octavia Cade (艑tepoti Dunedin): 鈥楪oodbye Freddy鈥
  • Leah Dodd (Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington): 鈥楶ond Scum鈥
  • Robert Jenkins (Whakat奴 Nelson): 'Callooh鈥
  • Jessica Howland Kany (W膩naka): 鈥楶uzzling World鈥
  • Sam Keenan (Te Whanganui-a-Tara Wellington): 鈥楩reedom Voices鈥
  • Harriet Salmon (T膩maki Makaurau Auckland): 鈥楾he Singing Butcher鈥

Secondary Schools Division winners

First Place

鈥淟ooking back, I would imagine the house sighed, a long, tired exhale, when the boxes were pulled out of hiding. As if it recognised the ritual and felt our whakapapa loosening from its bones, a farewell beginning before any goodbye was spoken.鈥

Brooke Smith (Waiuku College):

Brooke Smith is a Year 13 student at Waiuku College and will be starting a degree in midwifery next year. She has always loved writing, especially essays where she can pull apart and analyse films, but creative writing has become a way for her to explore other ideas and experiences. Having moved around a lot across different parts of New Zealand, Brooke has often found herself navigating new places and people, and those changes have shaped the way she thinks about belonging and identity. Her story 鈥楶iece of the Furniture鈥 was based on some of those experiences, while also incorporating her M膩ori culture, which continues to influence her perspective. Writing gives her the chance to reflect on her own journey while hopefully being able to connect with others, and she hopes to keep writing alongside her studies as a way to capture moments, feelings, and the details of everyday life.

(25 October 2025)

Second Place

鈥淚 try to want to be here, in this phony living room with him, but I don鈥檛 think I do. I feel the minutes tick by, like the room is watching me. His face kills me, it鈥檚 sick. Sick. Sick. Sick."

Haelyn King (Green Bay High School): 'Double Solitaire'

Haelyn King is currently a Year 12 student at Green Bay High School in Auckland. She enjoys reading, writing, and making art in her spare time, on a constant search for new ways to create. Haelyn loves being immersed in fiction, particularly enjoying dystopian fiction and the found family trope. Haelyn is also driven to pursue a career in zoology, a dream she has clung to since she was three years old. She volunteers at Auckland Zoo. She has enjoyed writing from a very early age, and has been encouraged by teachers and family. Ever since she could read, it has been her favourite pastime, developing into her love for writing as well. Although her passion for writing has been consistent over her life, the Sargeson Prize is one of the first competitions she has entered.

Third Place

鈥淟ike when we watched a video of the Capitol Riots in history, and it looked kinda fun: the way their necks strained as they entered the rotunda. It was 鈥榯heir house鈥, they said. The crowd seemed to move as one."

Thomas Beaglehole-Smith (Wellington College): 'Glory Keeps Fucking with My Throat'

Thomas Beaglehole-Smith is a Year 13 student at Wellington College who writes short stories and poetry. He received a Highly Commended at last year鈥檚 Mansfield Short Story Award. Other than writing, Thomas spends his time debating, walking his dog, or cleaning his room. Next year, he will be attending university to study Law and Arts and plans to continue writing. He would also like to give a shoutout to his beautiful girlfriend, Sophie. 鈥楪lory Keeps Fucking with My Throat鈥 was originally written as part of a VicStart university course, where Thomas took to heart the maxim that you should speak from where you stand. It was partially inspired by (the GOAT) Tayi Tibble鈥檚 work. He hopes it makes you feel uncomfortable.

Highly Commended

  • Jeremy Guy (Wellington College): 鈥極n the Seventh Day鈥
  • Anouk Hector-Taylor (Cashmere High School): 鈥楥rests and Troughs鈥
  • Elizabeth Houghton (Hutt Valley High School): 鈥楯ewel Wasp Cockroach鈥
  • Bryony Keynes (Whangarei Girls鈥 High School): 鈥楥onfluence鈥
  • Amelie Lewis (Kristin School): 鈥楾he Camellias鈥
  • Emily Feng Yi Ng (Villa Maria College): 鈥楢s It Is Written鈥
  • Helianth Nguyen (Westlake Girls鈥 High School): 鈥楢s a mother to a mother鈥
  • Polly O鈥橲ullivan-Watts (Westlake Girls鈥 High School): 鈥楻itualistic Hunger鈥
  • Thalia Peterson (Home-schooled): 鈥極nsra鈥
  • Grace Sutherland (Kuranui College): 鈥楢虋ngermana虉lven鈥
  • Nenabella Sutherland-Demmocks (Mt Hobson Academy): 鈥楽mall鈥

Past Winners