Author Talk - City of Melville

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Join me tomorrow night (Wednesday 27) for an author talk via Zoom for the City of Melville. We’ll start on the cobbled streets of Oaxaca de Juarez, in Mexico … head on to the steamy backwaters of eastern Indonesia … and end up at the Ranger Uranium Mine in the Northern Territory, where children build castles from radioactive mud. The chat’s on at 6pm WA time and you can join the meeting by clicking right here, then.

Love to Read Local - Writing WA

I’m thrilled to be part of Writing WA’s Love to Read Local - a celebration of the incredible work by West Australian authors and illustrators.  I chatted recently with Palyku children’s book author Helen Milroy, and Yawuru graphic novelist Brenton McKenna about our work and the local authors who inspire us. We covered some wild topics - things like literally bleeding on our pages, the snobbery of the establishment, the magic in children’s stories. Brenton’s Ubby’s Underdogs series, released by @magabalabooks, is a unique, hair-raising comic set in old Broome ...... and Helen’s Wombat, Mudlark and Other Stories through @fremantlepress is not just for kids. I found myself sometimes with goosebumps, and sometimes choking back tears. Their work is amazing and well worth checking out. So is this podcast! Check it out here.

New biographies of Wayne Bergmann, Peter Matthiessen, Ruth Park and Eric Dark are one step closer to reality as would-be authors make the Hazel Rowley Fellowship shortlist

Photo by Charlotte Dickie. @charbllavita.

Photo by Charlotte Dickie. @charbllavita.

By Fremantle Press.

Fremantle Press author Madelaine Dickie is one of nine Australian writers shortlisted for the 2020 Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship worth $15,000.

Madelaine, whose fictional works include her City of Fremantle Hungerford Award winning novel Troppo and her just-released second book Red Can Origami, is currently working on the biography of Wayne Bergmann, an Indigenous leader from the Kimberley.

Madelaine said, ‘Hazel Rowley was famed for shedding light on extraordinary people and her book about the rebellious Australian author Christina Stead was one of four critically acclaimed biographies [that she wrote]. If I can do justice to Wayne’s incredible story of resilience and leadership, I’ll feel like I’m doing justice to Hazel’s memory and her wish to give people the courage to “break out of their confined world”.’

Della Rowley, sister of Hazel Rowley, said she was excited to see the diverse range of subjects and literary approaches to biographical writing around Australia. In a media release about the award, she said, ‘This year we received a record number of applications coming from all States and Territories of Australia and the strength of the proposals has been reassuring. It is nine years since my sister died and we began the Fellowship, so it is wonderful that Hazel’s legacy continues to encourage and support Australian writers and biographers.’

Those also in the running for the Fellowship are: Margo Beasley (NSW) for a biography of Australian doctor and political activist Eric Dark; Diane Bell (ACT) for her proposed monograph ‘The Queen and the Protector’, about Ngarrindjeri woman Louisa Karpany and South Australian ‘Sub-Protector of Aborigines’ George Mason; Tegan Bennett Daylight (NSW) for a biography of New Zealand-born writer Ruth Park; Stephenie Cahalan (Tas), writing about Australian artist Jean Bellette; Gabrielle Carey (NSW) for a biography of Australian writer Elizabeth von Arnim; Shakira Hussein (Vic) for her memoir ‘NineEleven-itis’; Lance Richardson (NSW/USA), writing about American author, naturalist and Zen Buddhist Peter Matthiessen; and Suzanne Robinson (Vic) for her proposal ‘Decadent Melbourne’ about art, artists and immorality in the 1890s.

Director of Writers Victoria Angela Savage said that given the fellowship’s past successes, there was a good chance some of the projects would make it to print. She said, ‘Any one of the shortlisted entries would make for fascinating reading.’

The 2020 fellowship will be judged by biographers Jenny Hocking and Jeff Sparrow, along with Della Rowley and Lynn Buchanan, Hazel’s close friend.

The winner of the 2020 fellowship will be announced at a special event at the Wheeler Centre on Friday 20 March 2020.

Madelaine Dickie’s books, Troppo and Red Can Origami, are available in all good bookstores and on the Fremantle Press website. She will be a guest at Perth Festival’s Literature and Ideas Weekend, 22–23 February.

Bergmann bio shortlisted for a Hazel Rowley Fellowship!

Photo by Charlotte Dickie.

Photo by Charlotte Dickie.

Monday, January 20, 2020

By: Writers Victoria and the Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship

Nine Australian writers have been shortlisted for the 2020 Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship worth $15,000. 

The Fellowship, now in its ninth year, attracted over 60 applications from biographers and memoir writers across Australia.

“It is very exciting to see the diverse range of subjects and literary approaches to biographical writing around Australia,” said Della Rowley, sister of biographer Hazel Rowley. “This year we received a record number of applications coming from all States and Territories of Australia and the strength of the proposals has been reassuring.”

“It is nine years since my sister died and we began the Fellowship, so it is wonderful that Hazel’s legacy continues to encourage and support Australian writers and biographers.”

“Any one of the shortlisted entries would make for fascinating reading,” said Angela Savage, Director of Writers Victoria, which administers the award. “And there’s a good chance we’ll see some of them in print, given the Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship’s success to date in nurturing works to publication.”

The Fellowship, established to commemorate the life, ideas and writing of Hazel Rowley (1951–2011) awards $15,000 to an Australian writer to support the writing and research of a biographical work.

The shortlist

  • Margo Beasley (NSW) for a biography of Australian doctor and political activist Eric Dark

  • Diane Bell (ACT) for her proposed monograph ‘The Queen and the Protector’, about Ngarrindjeri woman Louisa Karpany and South Australian ‘Sub-Protector of Aborigines’ George Mason

  • Tegan Bennett Daylight (NSW) for a biography of New Zealand-born writer Ruth Park

  • Stephenie Cahalan (Tas) writing about Australian artist Jean Bellette

  • Gabrielle Carey (NSW) for a biography of Australian writer Elizabeth von Arnim

  • Madelaine Dickie (WA) for a biography of Indigenous leader Wayne Bergmann, a Kimberley Traditional Owner

  • Shakira Hussein (Vic) for her memoir ‘Nine Eleven-itis’

  • Lance Richardson (NSW/USA) writing about American writer, naturalist and Zen Buddhist Peter Matthiessen               

  • Suzanne Robinson (Vic) for her proposal ‘Decadent Melbourne’, about art, artists and immorality in the 1890s

Award Night

The winner will be announced at a special event at The Wheeler Centre on Friday 20 March 2020. This will follow the Hazel Rowley Memorial lecture to be given by biographer Jacqueline Kent, entitled ‘Making Characters: biography and memoir’. Having written both biography and memoir, Jacqueline will discuss the different challenges and privacy considerations of each.

The 2020 Fellowship will be judged by biographers Jenny Hocking and Jeff Sparrow, along with Della Rowley and Lynn Buchanan, Hazel’s close friend.

About the Previous Fellows

The 2019 Fellowship was awarded to Eleanor Hogan (NT) for her project on the friendship between Ernestine Hill and Daisy Bates.

In 2018, the Fellowship was awarded to Jacqueline Kent (NSW) for a biography of suffragist Vida Goldstein.

In 2017, Ann-Marie Priest (Queensland) was awarded the Fellowship for her biography of renowned Australian poet Gwen Harwood.

The 2016, the Fellowship went to Matthew Lamb (Tasmania) for 'Frank Moorhouse: A Discontinuous Life', to be published by Vintage.

In 2015, the Fellowship was awarded to Caroline Baum (NSW), for a biography of Lucie Dreyfus (1870-1945).

The 2014 Fellowship went to Maxine Beneba Clarke (Victoria) for her memoir, 'The Hate Race' – about growing up black in white middle-class Australia. It was published by Hachette in 2016 and won several awards.

Stephanie Steggall (Queensland) used the 2013 Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship to write a biography of Thomas Keneally, 'Interestingly Enough...' published by Black Inc. in 2015.

The inaugural recipient of the Hazel Rowley Literary Fellowship in 2012, Mary Hoban (Victoria), had her biography 'An Unconventional Wife: The Life of Julia Sorell Arnold' published in April 2019.

About Hazel Rowley

“My books are about people who had the courage to break out of their confined world and help others to do the same” – Hazel Rowley

Before her death in 2011, Hazel wrote four critically acclaimed biographies: ‘Christina Stead: A Biography (1993)’, ‘Richard Wright: The Life and Times (2001)’, ‘Tête-à-Tête: The Lives and Loves of Simone de Beauvoir and Jean-Paul Sartre’ (2005) and ‘Franklin and Eleanor: An Extraordinary Marriage’ (2010). Erudite and accessible, these studies brought fresh attention to the lives and works of significant figures both nationally and internationally.