While juggling her own baby daughter, Russian lover, a needy dog, and a plaguing ex-husband, Sandra races across the globe in pursuit of truth on behalf of a mother who wants to know how a game killed her son. And finds that the threads of truth and illusion can easily wind into a game of manipulation and deceit."--BOOK JACKET.
Sophie Harper is abandoned by her husband and left with a four-year- old daughter to support. She finds work in an old house in Canberra that is being used as a brothel. She falls under the house's strangely comforting spell, and discovers the capacity to learn from the men and women she encounters there.
In the first of a remarkable new series, Dorothy Johnston has produced a compelling story of computer crime, loyalty and betrayal against the backdrop of a city - and a country - on the cusp of political change.
A collection of stories funded by the Australian Bicentennial Authority to celebrate Australia's Bicentenary in 1988 and originally published in that year as 'Canberra Tales'. The authors are part of a group of writers known as the 'Seven Writers' who first met in Canberra in 1980 to support and critically encourage each other. The stories cover a wide range of experiences including a man's strange pact with his dying daughter and sadism which erupts out of the commonplaces of a broken marriage. Between the authors they have published seven books.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.