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busterb 09-24-2006 10:39 AM

Downunder Authors
 
Any help in finding authors who write, wrote about the early days downunder? Someone like Wilbur Smith, who has written about Africa. I read some years ago and don't have a clue as to who wrote them.
Tnxs BB

Clodfobble 09-24-2006 11:48 AM

I read Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore in high school, about the founding of Australia with colonies of convicts. Nonfiction, but it reads like a novel. It was good enough to keep; I still have it on the bookshelf.

wolf 09-24-2006 06:18 PM

The only Australian novel I can recall reading is Nevil Shute's "A Town Like Alice," which is realy about what happened to a group of English Women and Children who were taken prisoner by the Japanese. I saw the Masterpiece Theater teleplay and wanted to read the original story.

DucksNuts 09-24-2006 06:26 PM

Judy Nunn has written a few.... KAL for example.

Also, Bryce Courtenay

busterb 09-26-2006 11:49 AM

Thanks BB

SteveDallas 09-26-2006 12:03 PM

There are a couple Aussie sci-fi authors I like, but sounds like that's not what you're looking for!

busterb 10-10-2006 06:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble
I read Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore in high school, about the founding of Australia with colonies of convicts. Nonfiction, but it reads like a novel. It was good enough to keep; I still have it on the bookshelf.

Thanks. I picked it up at library today.

Aliantha 10-10-2006 06:53 PM

You could try Leviathan by John Birmingham. It's mostly about Sydney and its origins right up to modern times. An interesting read in my opinion and as it is a referenced biographical account, it falls under the genre of creative non-fiction which is what gives it the flavour of the city more than anything else.

JayMcGee 10-10-2006 07:32 PM

'creative non-fiction' ....... that's gotta rank with a 'terminalogical in-exactitude'

Aliantha 10-11-2006 11:33 PM

creative non-fiction is pretty much the genre for most biographical novels. The events in the story are fact, but the story is created by the authors imagination. Even Auto-biographies are creative non-fiction because when you write the story of your life, no one could possibly expect anyone to remember every conversation word for word etc. Hence, 'creative' non-fiction.

Trust me, it's an actual genre and very popular in this post modern era.

JayMcGee 10-12-2006 06:28 PM

mmmmm.....ok... I grudgingly accept the concept.... but, like TV 'drama-documetaries' I have reservations about not only the versimiltude of such creations, but also of the long-term affect upon an increasingly less-literate society... we are in grave danger of creating a whole new set of 'urban legends'...

'it must be right - it was in this book i red - i saw it in that docuentary i seed on the box ...'

Aliantha 10-12-2006 06:44 PM

Well that has to do with teaching people critical and independant thought. There are sections of society which have always had difficulty with that concept. ;)

JayMcGee 10-12-2006 07:09 PM

mmmm...... which concept? crictical & independent thought? or the teaching of it......

Aliantha 10-12-2006 07:15 PM

Jay...I think the lack of teaching students this basic skill is a problem in the education system.

busterb 10-12-2006 07:52 PM

:) Read my lips. Downunder authors!

JayMcGee 10-12-2006 08:13 PM

Sean McMullen..... now go away....

@Aliantha..... is the Oz system reaaly a bad as that? (that wasn't a typo... I type with a manc accent). It's getting that way here in the UK, where the criteria for excellence is how many tick-boxes you ticked rather than how many kids you inspired.

Aliantha 10-13-2006 04:47 AM

I gave you one Buster. ;)

Jay, I think there are a lot of problems with the bureauracracy involved in the education system these days. It's really quite ridiculas.

Clodfobble 10-13-2006 09:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Aliantha
I think there are a lot of problems with the bureauracracy involved in the education system these days. It's really quite ridiculas.

Oh dear. I don't know if I can handle that much irony right after waking up...

Aliantha 10-13-2006 06:59 PM

Glad I'm not a spelling nazi.

Clodfobble 10-13-2006 11:46 PM

But maybe your high school English teacher wishes you were?

Aliantha 10-14-2006 12:22 AM

Actually I did very well in English in school. I guess I just have never made the mistake of thinking I'm perfect...in anything. :)

busterb 10-18-2006 05:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Clodfobble
I read Robert Hughes' The Fatal Shore in high school, about the founding of Australia with colonies of convicts. Nonfiction, but it reads like a novel. It was good enough to keep; I still have it on the bookshelf.

I gave up at page 487, but I'm damn glad I wasn't in that goat roping.

Buddug 10-18-2006 07:22 PM

busterby asked if anyone knew about a writer who wrote about the 'early days' in Australia . The early days in Australia were about 40,000 years ago , but the Aborigines did not write in our modern sense .
I therefore take it that busterby means to refer to the early COLONIAL days in Australia . If so , you should read Henry Lawson . 'The Drover's Wife' is perhaps his best short story , and is seen as an Aussie classic . There is a snake in the house , and the husband ( the drover ) is absent . The drover's wife is sunburnt and hardy , and there are children in the house . The snake scene is described in the present tense . The writing may be clumsy sometimes, but it rings true and clear . It is the beginning of white Australian literature .

Buddug 10-18-2006 07:26 PM

P.S. sorry about the 'y' , busterb . 'Busterb' should rhyme with 'do not disturb' . No why (?) .

busterb 10-18-2006 07:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Buddug
P.S. sorry about the 'y' , busterb . 'Busterb' should rhyme with 'do not disturb' . No why (?) .

No Idea?

Buddug 10-18-2006 07:59 PM

Perhaps you should be grateful for the information I gave you ?

busterb 10-18-2006 08:57 PM

Well thanks and I have it saved to lookup. BUT rhyme ??


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