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The Best Australian Stories 2004 book cover
The Best Australian Stories 2004
2004
First Published
3.62
Average Rating
218
Number of Pages
Frank Moorhouse, one of Australia's most celebrated writers, has chosen twenty-seven pieces that, he says, 'set a new benchmark in the standard of the short story'. Inventive, adventurous, seductive and entertaining, the stories range in setting from war-torn Sarajevo to the streets of Che Guevara's Havana, from the electronic buzz of Tokyo to the waterways of ancient Rome. Both new and established writers are featured, including J. M. Coetzee, Delia Falconer and Graeme Kinross-Smith.
Avg Rating
3.62
Number of Ratings
13
5 STARS
8%
4 STARS
46%
3 STARS
46%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Frank Moorhouse
Author · 19 books

Frank Thomas Moorhouse AM (21 December 1938 – 26 June 2022) was an Australian writer. He 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. Moorhouse was 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, which trace the strange, convoluted life of a young woman who enters the world of diplomacy in the 1920s through to her involvement in the newly formed International Atomic Energy Agency after World War II. The author of 18 books, Moorhouse became a full-time fiction writer during the 1970s, also writing essays, short stories, journalism and film, radio and TV scripts. In his early career he developed a narrative structure which he has described as the 'discontinuous narrative'. He lived for many years in Balmain, where together with Clive James, Germaine Greer and Robert Hughes, he became part of the "Sydney Push" - an anti-censorship movement that protested against rightwing politics and championed freedom of speech and sexual liberation. In 1975 he played a fundamental role in the evolution of copyright law in Australia in the case University of New South Wales v Moorhouse. - Wikipedia

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