Shining Like the Sun (2024)
Wilf Healy lives in the wheatbelt town of Selwyn, works in Monk’s Irish pub, delivers letters, drives the school bus, holds the place together. But he’s had enough, wants to retire – to forget his nephew Connor, at war with the world, his brother Brian, visiting from America, his niece Orla, sick with blood cancer. Although he plans, and tries, he can’t leave.
This piece from Whispering Gums picks up on some of the book's main ideas.
This piece is about how and why I wrote Shining.
A lovely review from ANZ LitLovers.
Some thoughts from Rod McLary at Queensland Reviewers Collective.
Ben Adams' in InReview
Cameron Woodhead and Fiona Capp in the Sydney Morning Herald
Sincerely, Ethel Malley (2021)
In the darkest days of World War II, Ethel Malley lives a quiet life on Dalmar Street, Croydon. One day she finds a collection of poems written by her late (and secretive) brother, Ern. She sends them to Max Harris, co-editor of modernist magazine Angry Penguins. He reads them and declares Ern an undiscovered genius. Determined to help publish the poems, Ethel moves in with Max and soon becomes a presence he can’t understand, or control. He gets the feeling something’s not quite right. About Ethel. About Ern. Then two poets come forward claiming they wrote Ern’s poems. What follows is part-truth, part-hoax, a dark mystery as surreal as any of Ern’s poems. Max wants to believe in Ern, but to do this he has to believe in Ethel, and attempt to understand her increasingly unpredictable behaviour. Then he’s charged with publishing Ern’s ‘pornographic’ poems. The questions of truth and lies, freedom of speech, and tradition versus modernism play out in a stifling Adelaide courtroom, around the nation’s wirelesses, and in Max’s head. Based on Australia’s greatest literary hoax, Sincerely, Ethel Malley explores the nature of creativity, and human frailty. It drips with the anaemic blood of Australian literature, the gristle of a culture we’ve never really trusted.
Jen Banyard's insightful take on Ethel for Westerly
Whispering Gums on Ethel Malley.
An Ethely chat with David McLean at 3CR (Published Or Not).
Podcast with me and Paul Barclay (Big Ideas) for Radio National's Big Weekend of Books
ABC Radio National's Simon Leo Brown's take on the Ern Malley affair, and the book
Susan Sheridan meets Ethel in the July 2021 Australian Book Review.
Simon Caterson's take on Ethel in The Australian.
Generous review from Michael McGirr in the Age/Sydney Morning Herald.
With Claire Nichols on Radio National's Book Show.
Here's me rabbiting on about Ethel for the wonderful Matilda Bookshop in the Adelaide Hills.
The Bookshelf (Radio National) podcast. Kate Evans, Cassie McCullagh and Gavin Williams discuss Ethel.
Podcast discussion of the hoax and trial with Emily Sutherland, here, at 5MBS
Read an InDaily extract here.
An incisive review from Lisa Hill at ANZ LitLovers
Another thoughtful review from the Queensland Reviewers Collective
The Lanternist (2021)
1901. The slide clunks into the lantern, and Phantoms come alive on the wall. The father-and-son Magic Lantern team of Bert and Tom Eliot are masters of The Art of the Story. The only problem is that they are missing a wife and mother. Then one morning eleven-year-old Tom wakes to find his father missing, too. The Lanternist’s apprentice is thrown out of home, forced to work for the arch-criminal Jimmy Sacks, arrested and imprisoned. Will he ever be able to escape with his new friend Max and make the long, flea-bitten, rat-infested journey to Sydney in search of his parents? The Lanternist is a story about stories, and how they show us a way through life, despite callous landladies, corrupt officials, criminal companions and the problems with living in incinerators. But mostly, it is about searching, and making your own endings.
Q&A with the good people at #LoveOzYA about Tom Eliot, bear baiting, pickled feet and all things magic lantern.
Teachers' Resources here.
Nice look at the book from Ashleigh at The Book Muse.
Thanks to Lara Cain Gray and her Charming Language blog for being the first to read about Tom Eliot's adventures.
Details from MidnightSun Publishing here.
Q&A with the good people at #LoveOzYA about Tom Eliot, bear baiting, pickled feet and all things magic lantern.
Teachers' Resources here.
Nice look at the book from Ashleigh at The Book Muse.
Thanks to Lara Cain Gray and her Charming Language blog for being the first to read about Tom Eliot's adventures.
Details from MidnightSun Publishing here.
This Excellent Machine (2019)
Clem Whelan's got a problem: trapped in the suburbs in the Sunnyboy summer of 1984 he has to decide what to do with his life. Matriculation? He's more than able, but not remotely interested. Become a writer? His failed lawyer neighbour Peter encourages him, but maybe it's just another dead end? To make sense of the world, Clem uses his telescope to spy on his neighbours. From his wall, John Lennon gives him advice; his sister (busy with her Feres Trabilsie hairdressing apprenticeship) tells him he's a pervert; his best friend, Curtis, gets hooked on sex and Dante and, as the year progresses and the essays go unwritten, he starts to understand the excellence of it all.
A chat about Datsuns, suburbia and growing up fibro on Tim Ross's The Cars That Made Australia.
Longlisted International Dublin Literary Award 2021
Review from Queen's University (Dementia Fiction)
Here is a generous review from Lisa Hill at ANZ LitLovers
Marcel (Proust), Milan (Kundera) and Me (me), in the The Age/Sydney Morning Herald
'Chariot Culture' feature in The Australian
Read an extract here in InDaily
Another extract from The Adelaide Review.
Review from the excellent Helen Eddy at ReadPlus
A published work-in-progress (2018) from Westerly
Review in The Australian
Review in Westerly
ABC Perth (Barry Nicholls)
Clem Whelan's got a problem: trapped in the suburbs in the Sunnyboy summer of 1984 he has to decide what to do with his life. Matriculation? He's more than able, but not remotely interested. Become a writer? His failed lawyer neighbour Peter encourages him, but maybe it's just another dead end? To make sense of the world, Clem uses his telescope to spy on his neighbours. From his wall, John Lennon gives him advice; his sister (busy with her Feres Trabilsie hairdressing apprenticeship) tells him he's a pervert; his best friend, Curtis, gets hooked on sex and Dante and, as the year progresses and the essays go unwritten, he starts to understand the excellence of it all.
A chat about Datsuns, suburbia and growing up fibro on Tim Ross's The Cars That Made Australia.
Longlisted International Dublin Literary Award 2021
Review from Queen's University (Dementia Fiction)
Here is a generous review from Lisa Hill at ANZ LitLovers
Marcel (Proust), Milan (Kundera) and Me (me), in the The Age/Sydney Morning Herald
'Chariot Culture' feature in The Australian
Read an extract here in InDaily
Another extract from The Adelaide Review.
Review from the excellent Helen Eddy at ReadPlus
A published work-in-progress (2018) from Westerly
Review in The Australian
Review in Westerly
ABC Perth (Barry Nicholls)
Incredible Floridas (2017)
As Hitler’s war looms, famous Australian artist Roland Griffin returns home from London with his family to live a simple life of shared plums and low-cut lawns in the suburbs. A daughter, and a son, Hal, growing up with a preoccupied father, always out in his shed stretching canvases and painting outback pubs. An isolated man obsessed with other people, and places. Everything is a picture, a symbol. Even Hal, the boy in the boat, drifting through a strange world of incredible Floridas. As the years pass, Roland learns that Hal is unable to control his own thoughts, impulses, behaviour. The boy becomes the destroyer of family. The neighbourhood is enlisted to help Hal find a way forward. Child actor, a clocker at Cheltenham Racecourse, an apprentice race caller. Longlisted International Dublin Literary Award 2019 Whispering Gums review here. Sydney Morning Herald/Age review here. Indaily extract here. Adelaide Review extract here. John Neylon's launch speech here. |
The Hands (2015)
On a cattle station that stretches beyond the horizon, seven people are trapped by their history and the need to make a living. Trevor Wilkie, the good father, holds it all together, promising his sons a future he no longer believes in himself. The boys, free to roam the world's biggest backyard, have nowhere to go. Trevor's father, Murray, is the keeper of stories and the holder of the deed. Murray has no intention of giving up what his forefathers created. But the drought is winning. The cattle are ribs. The bills keep coming. And one day, on the way to town, an accident changes everything.
Longlisted 2016 Miles Franklin Literary award.
Listen to a podcast with Cath Kenneally here.
Another podcast with Storycast here.
Indaily review here.
Readplus review here.
The Weekly Times review here.
Extract here.
One Boy Missing (2014)
It was a butcher on smoko who reported the man stashing the kid in the car boot. He didn't really know whether he'd seen anything at all, though. Maybe an abduction? Maybe just a stressed-out father. Detective Bart Moy, newly returned to the country town where his ailing, cantankerous father still lives, finds nothing. As far as he can tell no one in Guilderton is missing a small boy. Still, he looks deeper into the butcher's story—after all, he had a son of his own once. But when the boy does turn up, silent, apparently traumatised, things are no clearer. Who is he? Where did he come from and what happened to him? For Moy, gaining the boy's trust becomes central not just to the case but to rebuilding his own life. From the wreckage of his grief, his dead marriage and his fractured relationship with his father may yet come a chance for something new.
Shortlisted, Ned Kelly Awards, Best Crime Fiction 2014
Dissonance (2012)
Dissonance begins with piano practice. Fifteen-year-old Erwin Hergert is forced to tackle scales and studies for six hours a day by his mother, Madge, who is determined to produce Australia’s first great pianist. To help Erwin focus, Madge has exiled her husband, Johann, to the back shed. Jo is diagnosed with cancer and Madge allows him back inside, but only for long enough to die. Madge takes Erwin to Hamburg to continue his studies. Erwin prospers in Germany with his new teacher until he meets a neighbour, sixteen-year-old Luise, and finds there’s more to life than music. Meanwhile, Germany is moving towards war. Late 1930s Hamburg forms the backdrop to an increasingly difficult love-triangle, as Erwin is torn between the piano, Luise and the demands of his love and devotion to his mother. Soon the bombs, real and imagined, start falling. Marriage and parenthood give way to death, and tragedy. Before long Erwin and Madge are drawn into the horrors of a war that leaves little time for music. Dissonance is a re-imagining of the ‘Frankfurt years’ of Rose and Percy Grainger. You can read an extract here.
Time's Long Ruin (2010)
Nine-year-old Henry Page is a club-footed, deep-thinking loner, spending his summer holidays reading, roaming the melting streets of his suburb, playing with his best friend Janice, and her younger brother and sister. Until one day Janice asks Henry to spend the day at the beach with them. He declines, a decision that will stay with him forever. Time’s Long Ruin is a novel about friendship, love and loss; a story about those left behind, and how they carry on: the searching, the disappointments, the plans and dreams that are only ever put on hold.
Winner, SA Premier's Award for an Unpublished MS, Adelaide Festival, 2008
Highly Commended, Prime Minister’s Literary Awards, 2010
Shortlisted, Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, 2011
Longlisted, Miles Franklin Award, 2011
National Year of Reading 2012: SA selection for ‘Our Story’
French edition Le temps n'efface rien (Presses de la Cite)
Development as opera Innocence (State Opera SA)
Orchestral Suite from Innocence, played by the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, June 2021
Winner, SA Premier's Award for an Unpublished MS, Adelaide Festival, 2008
Highly Commended, Prime Minister’s Literary Awards, 2010
Shortlisted, Commonwealth Writers’ Prize, 2011
Longlisted, Miles Franklin Award, 2011
National Year of Reading 2012: SA selection for ‘Our Story’
French edition Le temps n'efface rien (Presses de la Cite)
Development as opera Innocence (State Opera SA)
Orchestral Suite from Innocence, played by the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra, June 2021
Hill of Grace (2004)
1951. Among the coppiced carob trees and arum lilies of the Barossa Valley, old-school Lutheran William Miller lives a quiet life with his wife, Bluma, and son, Nathan, making wine and baking bread. But William has a secret. He's been studying the Bible and he's found what a thousand others couldn't: the date of the Apocalypse. William sets out to convince his neighbours that they need to join him in preparation for the End. The locals become divided. Did William really hear God's voice on the Hill of Grace? Did God tell him to preach the End of Days? Or is William really deluded? The greatest test for William is whether Bluma and Nathan will support him. As the seasons pass in the Valley, as the vines flower and fruit and lose their leaves, William himself is forced to question his own beliefs and the price he's willing to pay for them.
ANZ LitLovers review here.
Runner-up, SA Premier's Award for Unpublished MS, 2004 Adelaide Festival
Attempts to Draw Jesus (2002)
In his gran's day jobs weren't a problem. But when Jack Alber gets laid off from the local servo there aren't many options. He's only seventeen and in his small town there's only need for one chemist and one butcher. And from his scribblings in his journal, it's evident that Clive 'Rolly' Rollins is more interested in observing life than living it. Jack and Rolly's fates are irrevocably changed when they both answer an ad to work as jackaroos on a remote outback station. The Great Sandy Desert will allow both to prove something to themselves and to their families and friends. A landscape of endless Mitchell grass and gibber plains will provide experiences they'd never find back home. But all it takes to change their destiny is one wrong turn.
Runner-up, 2000 Vogel/The Australian award