In 1959, Brathwaite wrote his first book, Fear in the Night, a novel set in the Pacific during the Second World War, in which a New Zealand air crew try to repair their bomber and get it airborne again before an approaching Japanese patrol arrives.[3] He became a full-time writer. The three novels The Flying Fish, The Needle's Eye and The Evil Day, written between 1964 and 1967, are a trilogy set during the New Zealand Wars of the nineteenth century.[4] He wrote over 30 books, including many travel guides to New Zealand, and numerous radio plays.[2]
Brathwaite died in Christchurch in 2005[2] and was buried in Avonhead Cemetery.[6]
Books
Fear in the Night 1959
An Affair of Men 1961
Long Way Home 1964
The Flying Fish 1964
The Needle's Eye 1965
The Evil Day 1967
Morning Flight 1970
The Companion Guide to the North Island of New Zealand 1970
The Companion Guide to the South Island of New Zealand 1972
The Beauty of New Zealand 1974
New Zealand and Its People 1974
Except the Lord Build the House 1977
The Flame Box 1978
Historic New Zealand 1980
Sixty Red Nightcaps and Other Curiosities of New Zealand History 1980
Wild New Zealand 1981
The Companion Guide to Westland 1981
Dunedin Photography 1981
The Beauty of Waikato-Bay of Plenty: Incorporating Rotorua & Taupo 1981
The Companion Guide to Otago, Southland and Stewart Island 1982
The Beauty of New Zealand's South Island 1982
The Beauty of New Zealand's North Island 1982
Pilot on the Run: The Epic Escape from Occupied France of Flight Sergeant L.S.M. (Chalky) White RNZAF 1986
Christchurch, North and Mid Canterbury 1988
A Portrait of New Zealand 1988
South Canterbury: Timaru, Mt Cook & the Mackenzie Country 1989
We'll Be Home for Christmas: The Second World War as Seen Through the Eyes of Ordinary New Zealanders Who Served in the Royal New Zealand Air Force (edited) 1994
References
^"Marriages". The Press. Vol. 84, no. 25471. 17 April 1948. p. 1. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
^ abc"Teller of yarns". The Press. 10 December 2005. p. 19.
^"New Fiction". The Press. Vol. 98, no. 29004. 19 September 1959. p. 3. Retrieved 6 September 2022.