Description
While Shirley Hazzard has many devoted admirers and readers, particularly for her best known novel The Transit of Venus, many would be unaware of her life story. She was a private woman, and because she lived in Europe and America, Australia had mixed feelings about her - and those mixed feelings were reciprocated.
Now, in a superb new biography, literary scholar Brigitta Olubas provides a comprehensive, insightful portrait of a complex woman who was ashamed of her genteel Sydney origins and her difficult mother, had a lacklustre career at the United Nations but was reborn when she reached Italy.
After several unhappy love affairs she found true harmony with the distinguished biographer Francis Steegmuller; Together they moved in intellectual circles and lived a privileged, cultured life in New York, Naples and on Capri.
Olubas has spent forty years studying Hazzard; the result is arguably the finest Australian biography of the year.
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Donald Horne was Australia’s leading public intellectual in the sixties and seventies and coined the phrase The Lucky Country in his bestselling book of the same title. The phrase has entered the Australian vernacular, and is often misused and interpreted as a sign of national complacency.
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Published 07/11/24
There has never been anyone like Russian impresario Serge Diaghilev.
The Russian impresario shook up the dusty world of ballet, making it the centre of the avant garde in the early part of the twentieth century, especially in Paris where the premieres of L’Apres Midi ‘D’un Faune and the Rite...
Published 07/04/24