Cold Light, 9781760620493
Paperback
An adaptation of Frank Moorehouse’s novel, Cold Light asks timely questions about Australia’s relationship to women of vision and people of difference.

Cold Light

Adapted from the novel by Frank Moorehouse

$28.62

  • Paperback

    100 pages

  • Release Date

    2 March 2017

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Summary

Here comes Edith Campbell Berry, fresh from International acclaim at the League of Nations, handsome British diplomatic husband in tow. Look out 1950s Canberra, she’s on her way to the top. Or is she?The League was after all a failure, and hubby dear is a secret cross dresser and her long lost brother is a Communist agitator watched by a fledgling ASIO. Maybe those dreams of renewed diplomatic honour might take longer than she thinks to materialise. A lot longer. And so to be ‘acceptable’ she…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781760620493
ISBN-10:1760620491
Author:Alana Valentine, Frank Moorhouse
Publisher:Currency Press Pty Ltd
Imprint:Currency Press Pty Ltd
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:100
Release Date:2 March 2017
Weight:100g
Dimensions:210mm x 135mm x 6mm
About The Author

Alana Valentine

ALANA VALENTINE’s Barbara and the Camp Dogs, co-written with Ursula Yovich, was nominated in the 2017 Sydney Theatre Awards for Best New Australian Work and Best Original Score. Ladies Day was nominated for the Nick Enright Prize for Drama (NSW Premier’s Literary Awards, 2017). Valentine is the recipient of two Tasmanian Theatre Awards (2017) for The Tree Widows, and was also nominated for an Errol for Best Director. Valentine has worked with Bangarra Dance Theatre as dramaturg on Dark Emu, after successful collaborations on Bennelong, Patyegarang and ID. In 2017 Venus Theatre Company (USA) world premiered The Ravens, which also won the BBC International Radio writing Award in 2013, and the National Library of Australia published Dear Lindy. Other works include The Sugar House, Ear to the Edge of Time, Letters to Lindy, and a jazz song cycle Flight Memory. Valentine is the co-recipient of a writing fellowship at the Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney. ANK MOORHOUSE AM was born in the coastal town of Nowra, NSW. He worked as an editor of small-town newspapers and as an administrator and in the 1970s became a full-time writer. He has written fiction, non-fiction, screenplays and essays and edited many collections of writing. He has won major Australian national prizes for the short story, the novel, the essay, and for script writing. His work has been published in the United Kingdom, France and the United States and also translated into German, Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, Serbian, and Swedish. He has also undertaken numerous writing fellowships. Moorhouse was made a member of the Order of Australia for services to literature in 1985 and was awarded an honorary doctorate from Griffith University in 1997. In 2001 he received the Centenary Medal for service to Australian society through writing. Moorhouse is perhaps best known for winning the 2001 Miles Franklin Literary Award for his novel Dark Palace which together with Grand Days and Cold Light, ‘the Edith Trilogy’, is a fictional account of the League of Nations. Grand Days won the South Australian Premier’s Award for Fiction and, as well as winning the 2001 Miles Franklin Award, Dark Palace was shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s Literary Award, the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award and the Age Book of the Year Award. Cold Light won the Queensland Premier’s Literary Awards in 2012 and was shortlisted for the 2012 Miles Franklin Literary Award. Moorhouse’s novel Forty-Seventeen (1988) was named 1988 Book of the Year by the Age and won the 1988 Australian Literature Society’s Gold Medal. His novel The Electrical Experience (1974) won the 1975 National Award for Fiction. His book, The Drover’s Wife, was published in 2017 by Random House.

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