New Zealand Listener

Scoundrel’s lair

To get to the front door of Rannoch, the Arts and Crafts-style house always described as a mansion, you drive down a private lane. The house is shrouded from view by dense planting. It says, like the houses of any very rich person, that this is a private place, a sanctuary. As you wind up the driveway, there are glimpses of sculptures, of the house. In retrospect, given what we now know about its owner, it seems to be a shadowy place, a place where ill-kept secrets were concealed. There is an air of the Gothic about Rannoch.

In 2011, I knocked on the front door and Sir James Wallace answered. I was there to talk to him for a newspaper er profile. He almost never gave personal interviews.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener3 min read
Upwardly Mobile
Slowly but surely, the transport mode shift we’ve been told is required to cut carbon emissions is happening around the country. In some places, it’s also having unintended consequences. In my part of Wellington, Oriental Bay, a new bike lane at the
New Zealand Listener3 min read
Uncovering Our Past
There’s a Māori whakataukī (proverb) that says, “Kia whakatōmuri te haere whakamua. / I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on the past.” The loop of past, present and future speaks to New Zealand Wars: Stories of Tauranga Moana, the la
New Zealand Listener7 min read
Fast Track To Destruction
What exactly is meant by red and green tape (Politics, April 20)? A favourite term used by our prime minister in his commentary on our democratic processes. Red tape in the past referred to the binding around administrative files. Perhaps the referen

Related Books & Audiobooks