Where the Queens all Strayed

Where the Queens all Strayed

by Barbara Hanrahan
Publication Date: 06/12/2021

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It’s the beginning of the twentieth century and young Thea Hodge lives with her family in the picturesque Adelaide hills. There’s her father, who’s hiding his drinking from her mother, her mother, who’s hiding from reality, and her older sister who seems all set to get married. But when her sister strays from the path that should lead her down the aisle, Thea comes to realise that in her world, there’s a price to pay for those who don’t conform. An evocative, richly realised novel of a society on the brink of change. First published in 1978.

As Geoff Page wrote in The Canberra Times on its release, ‘The main concern of the novel … \[is\] the gap between the polite, class-conscious exterior of Edwardian life and its more seamy underside.’

A recent review by Melinda Rackham in The Conversation of ‘Bee-stung Lips’, a travelling exhibition of Hanrahan’s visual art, calls her ‘an Australian feminist artist you need to know’. The inclusion of Where the Queens All Strayed in the Untapped Collection will ensure that her value as a writer is also not forgotten.

Barbara Hanrahan (1939–1991) was a South Australian writer and artist. Her novels include The Scent of Eucalyptus (1973), The Frangipani Gardens (1980), Kewpie Doll (1984). Her diaries, edited by Elaine Lindsay, were published posthumously in 1998.

ISBN:
9781922749550
9781922749550
Category:
Classic fiction
Publication Date:
06-12-2021
Language:
English
Publisher:
Ligature
Barbara Hanrahan

Born in Adelaide in 1939, Barbara Hanrahan was a celebrated artist, printmaker and writer. Her first book, a semi-autobiographical account of her childhood, The Scent of Eucalyptus, was published in 1973 to rave reviews.

It was followed by another twelve novels and two short-story collections. Her last book, Good Night, Mr Moon, was published in 1992, the year after her death.

The Barbara Hanrahan Fellowship for South Australian writers was established to honour her memory and contribution to Australian literature.

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