Mike Riddell

Mike Riddell
Born 23 March 1953
Porirua East
Occupation minister, writer
Nationality New Zealander
Genre Urban Fantasy
Subject Christian theology
Literary movement Emerging church
Children 3
Website
www.mikeriddell.co.nz

Michael Riddell (born 23 March 1953 in Porirua East, New Zealand) is a Dunedin, New Zealand-based writer.

Early life

Riddell was born in Porirua East (now Cannons Creek, New Zealand), and began schooling at Porirua East Primary School. He was the youngest of a family of four, with two sisters and a brother. His family moved to Christchurch, where he continued schooling at Northcote Primary School, while living near the Styx River.

Secondary schooling took place at Christchurch Boys' High School, complete with Army Cadets and regular rugby. In the sixth form, he switched from sciences to arts.

He flew to Australia, hitchhiking up the east coast from Adelaide to Cairns, and spending some time living in a hippie commune in the rainforest north of Cairns. A return to NZ saw him hold down a succession of jobs long enough to earn a fare to the UK. Hitchhiking around Europe and Northern Africa. He returned to London, where he met Rosemary, a New Zealander who became his lifetime partner, and travelled back to New Zealand via Asia.

Riddell was accepted for the NZ Baptist Theological College in Auckland, so the family moved there in 1979. During the time at College, Riddell was involved in protest against the 1981 South Africa rugby union tour of New Zealand. The family moved to Switzerland in 1982, where Riddell pursued postgraduate studies in Theology at an international seminary near Zurich, graduating summa cum laude at the end of 1984.

Religious career

He returned to New Zealand, and was ordained and appointed minister of Ponsonby Baptist Church, a small congregation in the central city. Here he was to remain for some 9 years. He held a variety of jobs concurrent with that of minister, as a journalist for New Outlook, a current affairs journal, and later as a part-time lecturer at Baptist College. His first book, Godzone: A Guide to the Travels of the Soul, was published in 1992.

While minister of Ponsonby Baptist, Riddell was instrumental in establishing the Community of Refuge Trust, a community housing initiative providing accommodation for psychiatric patients and low-income tenants. He was actively involved in local affairs and served for a time on the Ponsonby Community Committee. In 1991, Riddell was involved in a confrontation with Auckland City Council over the proposed sale of Council housing in the Freemans Bay Area. He informed the councillors that they were stripping the poor their city of their dignity and leaving them naked.

Riddell resigned from being minister at Ponsonby Baptist in 1993. He became a lecturer in theological education, teaching under the University of Auckland School of Theology bachelor degree.

Writing career

In 1997, Flamingo published his first novel, The Insatiable Moon. Riddell moved to Dunedin, where he has become a Catholic layman, and now writes full time. This has resulted in another ten books, a play, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, and a screenplay of The Insatiable Moon, a feature film released in New Zealand in October 2010. In 2006 Riddell shifted to the Waikato, where he now resides in Cambridge.

In 2003 he completed his PhD through the University of Otago, on James K. Baxter’s contribution to New Zealand spirituality.

Publications

Fiction

Non-fiction

External links