A picture

bio

Please click any heading to expand my Bio for relevants dates and information.

ASSORTED (expand)

  • Various reviews and fashion articles published from time to time in The Age, The (now defunct) Herald and the (almost legendary) Digger.
  • Filled in for Les Tanner' s column on the back of the Saturday Age for nine weeks Feb to May ' 93. Also for Red Symons' This Life column in The Age 2003
  • A piece on Man ' O Man commissioned by Debi Enker for the Sunday Ages View magazine.
  • A piece in The Bulletin' s Commemorative " 1975" edition. (Nov. 2005)
  • Speech writing to order.

NOVELS (expand)

  • First novel: " Half Past Dead" published by Text, April 2002
  • Second novel: " A Hand in the Bush" - published by Text/Canongate April 2005
  • Third novel: " Flush" for publication 2008
  • Awarded a Varuna Fellowship in 2006.
  • AWARDS (expand)

    Awarded an Australia Council Fellowship of 6 weeks at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre, Ireland to be taken up between May and September 2008, to work on a non-fiction book with the working title " The Address Book."

    THE ADDRESS BOOK

    Between April and June 2008 I will be in Europe to begin work on a non-fiction project called The Address Book.

    I am a British Army 'services brat' born on the Rock of Gibraltar. I have lived at 32 addresses in my life in various different countries. Next year I plan to revisit all of them and write about the experience.

    What will I find there ?

    What will it mean ?

    Where do we call home ?

    Where do I belong ?

    I have been awarded a fellowship from the Australia Council of 6 weeks at the Tyrone Guthrie Centre in Ireland. I will use this centre as a base to visit all the addresses in Gibraltar, Germany and the UK.

    While I'm away I will maintain a blog, so, you can accompany me on the journey.

    CURRENT PROJECT

    FLUSH

    Flush is the third crime novel by Jane Clifton.

    In her second novel A Hand in the Bush we were introduced to psychologist Decca Brand and an assortment of anxious clients. In Flush one of those clients is accused of murder.

    Following an extreme weather event the body of Oleg Kransky's wife, Inga, washes up on the banks of the Maribyrnong River in flood.

    Caught in the act of taking his own life several hours later, and surrounded by the bloodstained clothes of his wife, Oleg quickly becomes the number one suspect.

    But he's not talking. To anyone.

    When Decca is called upon to assist the homicide squad in their enquiries it soon becomes apparent that even when Oleg was talking he wasn't telling the truth - about himself or about Inga.

    It's a complicated tale with more twists and turns than a box full of pretzels.

    How much water does it take to flush out a murderer ?