A Biography of Mervyn Bishop Australia's First Indigenous Professional Photographer
This illustrated biography of one of Australias treasured artists offers an intimate portrait of the struggles and triumphs of Mervyn Bishop, Australias ground-breaking Indigenous photographer.
Through beautiful and moving letters, Bring Us Home From Sorrow is an intimate portrait of losing a mother and the ways we are kept apart from those we love by distance, disease and death.
Simon Feldman had everything to live for and as it turns out everything to lose.
From co-founding a successful ASX-listed company to embezzling $16.5 million Simon's story is everything but ordinary. His life took a sharp turn when he was sentenced to four years in Silverwater jail. But it was upon his release that Simon was forced to ......
Oliver Freeman invites readers on an intimate journey through his life love, failures and triumphs. Through candid reflection and heartfelt prose, Freeman shares his profound experiences with intimacy and the complexities of being a man in today's world. With the wisdom gained from three marriages, Freeman explores the evolving dynamics of ......
Bodyline Casualty - the Bert Oldfield Story will explore previously unknown details of his war service, his part in the Bodyline series, his role in the development of women’s cricket, his kind gesture to England captain Douglas Jardine, his testy relationship with Don Bradman and friendship with former combatant England fast bowler Harold Larwood.
Mona Hayes is anything but traditional. Diamonds, furs and murder: the many crimes of Mona Hayes is a historical fiction inspired by the life and crimes of little-known 1930s thief Mona Hayes who takes whatever she wants - particularly diamonds, watches and furs.
In …a figment of your imagination, my dear, Elizabeth shares her remarkable story of family silences and distortion of her sense of self with raw honesty, courage, and humour.
Peter Kraus is a child survivor of the Holocaust who migrated to Australia with his parents and brother in 1948. His memoirs cover his familys Jewish roots and his life in Australia as an obstetrician-gynaecologist, now retired.
The coastal town is not named, nor is 'the boy' about whom and by whom this story of 1950's and 1960's rural Australia is written. Much of the narrative revolves around fishing waters, fresh and salt in Victoria's Western District. More than that, it is a journey from birth to hormones-haywire, mid-teens of a lad blessed with good health and ......