I am a freelance writer and editor. I am father of two boys. For the last few years I have focussed my writing interest on chronicling women and men's experience of childbirth and promoting better support for pregnant women and their partners. Recently, for a change of pace, I am writing two Australian history books. In 2014 I was elected Chair of the ACT Writers Centre.
In 2010 I established the Stringybark Short Story Awards to promote the short story as a literary form.
Australian history is replete with drama, yet for many, Australia's history from 1788 only consists of indigenous dispossession, convicts, gold-rushes, bushrangers and ANZACs. This book proves this view wrong — sure, we do include the old favourites – but there are many other tales to intrigue you. There's the custom official with the ingenious way of detecting illegal immigrants, the escapee who enjoys the taste of homo-sapiens, a colonial governor with a penchant for practical jokes, an evil military secret and an insider's view of a female mental asylum. Showcased here are thirty-three award-winning stories from Australian history, all based on real events, that shine a light on some of the lesser known corners of our past.
"Drop your breeches. There's a good lad." The ship's medical officer barely looks at me. He has his back to me while he waits for me to oblige. A small mallet twirls in his fingers. I dunno what he thinks he's going to do with that. "Strip, lad. That's an order. What's your name?"
"It's…"
I can't answer. Of all the ridiculous things I've failed at, forgetting to have a name is by far the most stupid.
— From "The Stowaway" by Catherine McGraffin
My eardrums shudder. The door erupts. A bag of flour flies across the room filling it with white fog. Noise reverberates around my skull, shatters the window. After the blast there is silence. For a few seconds I think I'm deaf. Then a thin wail pierces the paralysis; screams, thudding footsteps, shocked voices and the high-pitched terror of horses overwhelm the settlement.
— From "Never Again" by Rosemary Stride
"But, dear Elizabeth, you simply can't accept it."
"Of course I can, John."
"Whatever will people think, a married woman accepting a gift like that?"
"They'd think lucky woman."
— From "Worgan's Piano" by Peter Long.
Título : Golah Sing
EAN : 9781005829698
Editorial : David Vernon
El libro electrónico Golah Sing está en formato Redimensionnable
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