Brandl & Schlesinger

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www.brandl.com.au Brandl & Schlesinger Rights List Sydney 2015

Transcript of Brandl & Schlesinger

Page 1: Brandl & Schlesinger

www.brandl.com.au

Brandl & Schlesinger Rights List

Sydney 2015

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About Us

Brandl & Schlesinger, established in 1994 is now celebrating twenty–one years of publishing. We have a reputation as one of Australia’s most renowned independent publishers with many of our titles winning major literary awards. We publish books that are both challenging and thought provoking as well as being good reads. Brandl & Schlesinger has a diverse list of quality fiction and non-fiction, literary memoir and biography, academic journals, translations and a distinctive poetry list. We focus on publishing books that appeal to the international market. We also publish the journals, Southerly, Australia’s oldest literary magazine and Modern Greek Studies. Please check our web site www.brandl.com.au for further information on all our authors and titles, awards, agents, distributors and news updates. Brandl & Schlesinger is a member of the Australian Publishers’ Association. Brandl & Schlesinger gratefully acknowledges the assistance of the Commonwealth Government through the Australia Council, its art funding and advisory body.

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Contact

Brandl & Schlesinger Pty Ltd PO Box 127 Blackheath NSW 2785 Australia Phone: (+612) 4787 5848 www.brandl.com.au

Veronica Sumegi (Schlesinger) Publishing Director / Editorial / Foreign Rights [email protected]

András Berkes-Brandl Production Director / Publisher / Designer [email protected] Sue de Brett Editorial/marketing/publicity [email protected]

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Contents

Brandl & Schlesinger are pleased to present their titles for 2015-2016 each of which has been chosen for its quality of robust, thought-provoking appeal to readers. Included are also some key backlist titles.

Please also check our website for more of our titles – www.brandl.com.au

Brandl & Schlesinger

Kellinde Wrightson: The Notorious Frances Thwaites – TRUE CRIME Vrasidas Karalis: Demons of Athens – NON-FICTION

Adrian Newstead: The Dealer is the Devil – NON-FICTION/ART Damien Freeman: The Aunt’s Mirrors – MEMOIR

John A. Scott: N – SPECULATIVE FICTION Igor Gelbach: Tsaplin’s testimony – FICTION

Nick Athanasou: Palindrome – CRIME FICTION Nick Athanasou: The Person of the Man – FICTION

Jacob E Rosenberg: East of Time – MEMOIR/AUTOBIOGRAPHY Mehmet Ozalp: 101 Questions You Asked about Islam – RELIGION

Dr John England: Kickstart – HEALTH

About Us Contact Awards Agents

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Awards

John A Scott: N 2015 Shortlisted for Victorian Premier’s Literary Award 2014 Guardian Australia Best Books of 2014 Steven K Kelen: Island Earth 2014 Shortlisted for ACT Book of the Year Aidan Coleman: Asymmetry 2012 Shortlisted for Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature

2012 Shortlisted for Western Australian Premier’s Book Awards Rhyll McMaster: Late Night Shopping 2012 Shortlisted for the Queensland Literary Awards for Poetry 2012 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year for Poetry 2013 Highly Commended – Prime Minister’s Literary Award Jacob G. Rosenberg: Sunrise West 2008 Winner of New South Wales Premier’s Community Award 2008 Winner of the SA Arts Award for Non-Fiction Jacob G. Rosenberg: East of Time 2007 Winner of National Biography Award 2006 Winner of the NSW Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction 2006 Shortlisted for the Australian Gold Medal for Literature 2006 Shortlisted for the Queensland Premier’s Award for Non-Fiction 2006 Shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction 2006 Shortlisted for the SA Arts Award for Innovation in Fiction Chris Wallace-Crabbe: The Universe Looks Down 2006 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year for Poetry Stephanie Bishop: The Singing 2006 Shortlisted for the Kathleen Mitchell Award 2006 SMH Best Young Writer of the Year

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Awards

Rhyll McMaster: Feather Man 2008 Winner of the Barbara Jefferis Award 2008 Winner of the UTS Award 2008 Shortlisted for the Australian Gold Medal for Literature 2007 Shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Fiction Emily Maguire: Taming the Beast 2006 Shortlisted for the Kathleen Mitchell Award 2006 Nominated for the Inaugural Dylan Thomas Award David Brooks: Walking to Point Clear 2006 Shortlisted for the SA Arts John Bray Award for Poetry Geoff Page: Freehold 2006 Shortlisted for the SA Arts John Bray Award for Poetry Aidan Coleman: Avenues & Runways 2006 Shortlisted for the Mary Gilmore Award for First book of Poetry 2006 Shortlisted for NSW Premier’s Award for Poetry Sarah Day: The Ship 2005 Winner of Queensland Premier’s Judith Wright Calanthe Award for Poetry 2005 Joint winner of the ACT Judith Wright Award 2004 Winner of Wesley Michel Wright Prize for Poetry Wayne Grogan: Junkie Pilgrim 2004 Winner of Ned Kelly Award for First Book of Crime Ouyang Yu: The Eastern Slope Chronicle 2004 Winner of SA Arts Award for Innovation in Fiction 2003 Shortlisted for NSW Premier's Literary Award Igor Gelbach: Notes from the Esplanade (Translated by Rae Mathew) 2004 Shortlisted for Victorian Premier's Award for Translation

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Awards

Steven K. Kelen: Goddess of Mercy 2003 Shortlisted for The Age Poetry Book of the Year 2003 Shortlisted for Victorian Premier’s Literary Award 2003 Highly Commended for ACT Book of the Year John Tranter: Ultra 2003 Shortlisted for Tasmanian Pacific Region Poetry Prize 2002 Shortlisted for Judith Wright Calanthe Award for Poetry Chris Wallace-Crabbe: By and Large 2002 Shortlisted for Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Poetry 2002 Awarded Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal for Poetry 2002 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year Award for Poetry Gig Ryan: Heroic Money 2002 Shortlisted for the NSW Premier’s Award for Poetry Rosemary Dobson: Untold Lives & Later Poems 2001 Winner of The Age Book of the Year Award 2001 Winner of The Age Book of the Year for Poetry 2001 Shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Poetry Richard Deutch: Heart with piano wire 2001 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year for Poetry Gerry Turcotte: Flying in Silence 2001 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year for Fiction Adam Aitken: Romeo and Juliet in Subtitles 2002 Shortlisted for SA Festival Awards 2000 Shortlisted for The Age Book of the Year for Poetry

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Lau Siew Mei: Playing Madame Mao 2001 Shortlisted for the NSW Premier's Literary Award for Fiction 1999 Shortlisted for Queensland Premier's Literary Award George Alexander: Mortal Divide 1999 Winner of NSW Premier’s Literary Award Fay Zwicky: The Gatekeeper's Wife 1999 Winner of WA Premier's Literary Award for Poetry 1998 Shortlisted for SA Festival Awards

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Kellinde Wrightson

The Notorious Frances Thwaites

True crime/historical fiction

400 pages pb World Rights

ISBN 978-1-921556-42-5

Published: November 2014

The Notorious Frances Thwaites is a stand alone novel of a trilogy – text available for Parts 2 & 3 on request

Frances Thwaites had the sort of face that men found irresistably, sometimes disturbingly, sensual. She was mercurial and wayward and had a will of her own to go with it. As punishment for being too headstrong, her London-based parents sent her to the rough and ready Colony of New South Wales where, it was hoped, she would learn to do as she was told. She did not. Instead spurred on by her belief that she could do as she wished, she wandered from one misadventure to another, her involvement in crime escalating from petty theft to baby farming to full scale murder. As the press became obsessed with her story, she was alternately demonised and fantasised over. She became as infamous and controversial as Ned Kelly. Her role as one of the colony’s most notorious baby farmers has usually been depicted as evidence of a depraved psychopath. This novel based on a meticulous re-examination of letters, trial transcripts and first-hand accounts, tells a different tale.

Kellinde Wrightson is an award-winning scholar and published academic researcher. She has a BA with First Class Honours and the University Medal as well as a PhD in English from the University of Sydney. She also has an LLB and is a qualified lawyer in the jurisdiction of New South Wales. She has been a research fellow and lecturer in English literature, lawyer, reviewer and writer. She was an Australian Bicentennial Fellow, a British Library Centre for the Book Fellow, and an Australian Research Council Post-doctoral Fellow. Her doctoral thesis was published by University College, London, in 2001. She received a Literary Arts Residency at The Banff Centre during which she completed the final book in The Baby Farmer Trilogy. Born in Sydney, Australia, and raised in the idyllic setting of the South Coast of New South Wales, Kellinde Wrightson now lives in the magnificent Canadian Rocky Mountains where she spends her time writing and skiing. She is the mother of two quite extraordinary individuals, Gérard and Sophie Wrightson Turcotte.

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Vrasidas Karalis

The Demons of Athens

Literary non-fiction

ISBN 978-1-921556-41-8

Published: November 2014

Length: 65,000 word

World Rights

The narrator of the book starts a journey of discovery around the meaning of home, in a diary form, with a trip to Athens in the midst of the economic and social implosion of the country. He fuses fiction, reportage, and autobiography in an attempt to illustrate the social collapse in Greece after 2009 and its subsequent lack of creative imagination. The book consists of brief snapshots based on episodes that take place in Athens, ranging from people eating rotten food in garbage bins, to contemporary political discussions at the Greek parliament and the representation of the struggle of ordinary people to make their living. Demons of Athens belongs to the hybrid trans-generic literature which found its best expression in books such as Robert Byron’s The Road to Oxiana, Bruce Chatwin’s The Songlines and Jonathan Raban’s Coasting.

Vrasidas Karalis is Professor and Chair of the Department of Modern Greek Studies at the University of Sydney. He has published extensively, with special emphasis on Greek and European literatures, Greek Cinema, Balkan culture, European Union and Greece. He has also worked on modern European political philosophy, Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Cornelius Castoriadis. He has also translated two novels by Patrick White and Greek poetry into English. He won the Greek literary prize on translation for Patrick White’s Voss. His literary work includes a book on Manoly Lascaris (2007) and two collections of poems in Greek.

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Adrian Newstead

The Dealer is the Devil An Insider’s History of the Aboriginal Art Trade

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ISBN 978-1-921556-25-8 Autobiography/Art $49.95 480 pages with colour images World Rights Published: February 2014 • The emergence of the modern Aboriginal art movement is the most exciting and transcendent

chapters of contemporary Australian history. Within the space of just 40 years Indigenous artists transformed the perception of their culture from something of strictly ethnographic interest, into one of the great internationally acclaimed contemporary art movements of all time. They produced art works that collectors have been prepared to pay thousands, tens of thousands, and even hundreds of thousands of dollars to acquire. These works have found their way into major cities and art collections all over the world. This personal account of the story of the fluctuating fortunes and exponential success of the Aboriginal art movement is an incredibly exciting one with all of the elements one would expect of a complex drama, played out on a national and international stage. Political posturing, personal aggrandisement, commercial skulduggery and greed all play their part.

• Adrian Newstead has worked to represent Aboriginal artists and promote their work to a National

and International audience for more than 20 years. Through exhibitions, articles and publications he has made a continuing contribution to the increasing body of knowledge on the art, the artists and the industry that sustains them. He has coordinated more than 250 Aboriginal art exhibitions, has been a valuer of Australian Aboriginal art for the past 6 years and has acted as the agent for artists in negotiating copyright and licensing agreements. He has travelled extensively throughout Aboriginal Australia each year and has well-established contacts with craft advisers, artists’ agents, exhibiting galleries, wholesalers, retailers and artists in most remote regions of Australia. His proven commitment to Aboriginal art and the fostering of greater economic independence of Aboriginal traditional and urban communities is on-going.

See Adrian Newstead’s gallery website

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Damien Freeman

The Aunt’s Mirrors

68,000 words

ISBN 978-1-921556-46-3

World Rights

Published: October 2014

On the top shelf in his aunt’s dressing room, Damien Freeman discovered a collection of family memorabilia that told a story he had always assumed to be perfectly unexceptional. As he looked into the aunt’s mirrors, however, he realised that her house held the key to understanding the simple yet arresting values that had sustained seven generations of his family in Australia: the holiness of family life, love of ordinary people, commitment to communal life, attachment to objects, possibility of reclaiming the past, and reconciliation to the raging of family ghosts. The Aunt’s Mirrors reveals an unexpected story of how an immigrant family from Poland made a new life – whilst continuing an old one – in nineteenth-century Beechworth, Grafton, Rylstone, and Sydney, through the shared sense of meaningfulness that permeated the lives of seven generations of this Australian Jewish family.

Damien Freeman was born in Sydney in 1976 and educated at the University of Sydney and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He has lectured in the Philosophy Faculty at Cambridge on Beauty, Art and Aesthetic Experience and at the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Sydney. His particular research interests are aesthetics, human value, the emotions, and psychoanalysis. Visit Damien’s website.

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John A. Scott

N

Speculative Fiction

ISBN 978-1-921556-20-3

600 pp pb $32.95 World Rights

Published: April 2014

Shortlisted for Victorian Premiers Literary Award 2015

N is a story of ordinary people at a time of crisis; how they survive, how they succumb, how they triumph. In 1942, with the Japanese army on Australia’s doorstep, the death of a moderate independent politician precipitates a crisis in the government and allows a core of extreme right-wing politicians, backed by the military, to seize power. The coup has support from a consortium who have vested interests in maintaining strong links with Japan. They facilitate a Japanese invasion of Australia, ceding them land in Sydney including the harbour itself. A ‘phoney war’ is fought between Australian and Japanese forces. A central strand of the novel deals with the uncovering of this conspiracy. N centres on a small number of Australians – artists, writers, soldiers, public servants, internees – who are implicated in this deception and whose lives are torn apart by it.

John A Scott is the author of fifteen books of poetry and prose. His works have been published in the USA , UK and have appeared in French, German, Italian, Slovenian and Dutch translation. He has received Victorian Premier's prizes for both poetry and fiction. His screenplay for What I Have Written won an International Mystery Film Festival prize in Bologna and received an AFI nomination and an AWGIE award for best screenplay. His sequence of five short novels, Before I Wake, was shortlisted for the Banjo and the Miles Franklin awards and the Victorian Premier’s Prize. The Architect was shortlisted for the 2002 Biennial Adelaide Festival Awards for Literature, the Victorian Premier’s Prize for Fiction and the Miles Franklin award. In 2008 he received a Breaking New Ground award from the Literature Board of the Australia Council for the speculative historical romance, Inland Sea.

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Igor Gelbach

Tsaplin’s testimony

Fiction (Translated from the Russian by Alexander Boot) ISBN 978-1-921556-38-8 352 pp pb $29.95 World rights Published: August 2013

When and how did the Tsaplin case begin? With the 1942 murder of a British intelligence officer in

Alexandria? In the chaotic days of the 1968 Prague Spring? At the 1973 interrogation in the Leningrad KGB office? And how was Tsaplin’s life altered by the novel he had translated? Forces of history and contingencies of fate drive Tsaplin across three continents to Melbourne, where some very old grievances and betrayals come to a head...

“This is a novel of remarkable richness, swaying evocatively between fictive characters, modern European history and something that feels very close to autobiography. The threads of Middle Europe are woven into a new, haunting pattern, framed at last by the soothing richness of an Australian landscape. And Gelbach’s interacting characters are emotionally larger than civil life.” Chris Wallace-Crabbe

Igor Gelbach is a Russian writer living in Australia since 1989. He graduated as a physicist from Tbilisi State University in Georgia, and lived in Riga, Moscow, Tbilisi, Leningrad and Sukhumi on the Black Sea, rather like the characters of his novels, the artists and intellectuals. He was first published in 1986. In 2001, Gelbach was nominated for the Russian Booker Prize for Confessions of a Clay Man (English translation published by Brandl & Schlesinger) and was admitted into the prestigious St Petersburg Writers’ Guild as an overseas member. In 2003, his second novel, Notes from the Esplanade (English translation published by Brandl & Schlesinger) was short listed for the Victorian Premier’s Award for Literary Trans­lation. Gelbach’s Blum Lost was published in 2004 by Amphora in St Petersburg. It was acclaimed as one of the best Russian novels of the decade and short listed for Andrei Bely Literary Award. Tsaplin’s testimony, the writing of which was sup­ported by an Australia Council grant, was originally published by Rudomino Publishers in Moscow in 2008.

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Nick Athanasou

Palindrome

Crime fiction

280 pp pb $29.95

ISBN 978-1-921556-26-5

World Rights

Publication date: 2015

Anna Taylor is found with her throat cut, at the drug discovery firm where she works. In an atmosphere of ruthless ambition, high stakes and ulterior motives, her former mentor, Philip Hamilton, an Oxford pathology professor, investigates her murder through a series of meticulous scientific methods. Many of her colleagues stand to gain in some way by her death. Was Anna killed to disguise the dangerous effects of a highly marketable anti-cancer drug? Or was the motive professional jealousy?

Palindrome is a cerebral detective fiction that focuses on a forensic crime. A falsification of pharmaceutical test results for an anti-cancer drug leads to a murder.

Nick Athanasou grew up in Sydney, graduating in medicine at Sydney University. He is Professor of Pathology at Oxford University and a Fellow of Wadham College. Athanasou’s scientific background adds strength and conviction to his forensic description and in creating the atmosphere of academia where much of Palindrome is set. He has published three novels, and received an Australia Council New Writing Award.

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Nikos Athanasou

The Person of the Man

Fiction $26.95

68,000 words

ISBN 978-1-921556-07-4

World Rights

Published: 2013

The Person of the Man takes the reader into the outwardly successful but severely flawed marriage of Alice, a lawyer and Martin, an ambitious Oxford academic. At the heart of their relationship is the ‘person of the man’ – a selfish weighing of the advantages each person brings to the marriage. Martin’s betrayal and the tragedy that follows leads Alice to realise that the person of the man is often hidden and that love cannot be analysed it can only be understood.

NIKOS ATHANASOU was born in Perth in 1953. He graduated in medicine at Sydney and has lived in London and Oxford since 1980. He is Professor in Musculoskeletal Pathology at the University of Oxford. His collection of short stories, Hybrids and his novel, The Greek Liar are both published by Brandl & Schlesinger.

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Jacob G. Rosenberg

East of Time

Memoir/Autobiography

ISBN 1 876040 66 1 200 pp pb $26.95

Rights: World; North American Rights sold to Alabama University Press; Polish rights sold to Jacek Santorski; Israel rights sold to Kinneret Zmora Bitan Dvir Publishing

Audio book available

2007 Winner National Biography Award

2006 Winner of the NSW Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction

2006 Shortlisted for the Victorian Premier’s Literary Award for Non-Fiction

2006 Shortlisted for the SA Arts Award for Innovation in Fiction

2006 Shortlisted for the Australian Gold Medal for Literature

REPRINTED SIX TIMES

East of Time is a rendezvous of history and imagination, of realities and dreams, hopes and disenchantments. This extraordinary book, by turns stark and poetic, unfolds in a succession of short reminiscences that weave together into a shimmering tapestry depicting a lost world. The setting is Lodz, Poland, during the author’s childhood, when he witnessed the grand belief in a just new world overtaken by the cataclysmic events of the 1930s, imprisoned between the walls of ghettos, and finally silenced at Auschwitz. “East of Time is the most ruthlessly honest book about the nature of humankind that I have ever read… Reading it has changed my life. How, after reading this book, can I ever again look into my heart and not weep?” Alex Miller “Only a writer of the first rank can weave his love of song lyrically into a story of suffering that knows no redemption without debasing the suffering that he recounts.” Raimond Gaita JACOB G. ROSENBERG (1922–2008) was a poet, storyteller and author who lived through one of history’s darkest nightmares, and in his writings created a passionate and unique testament.

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Mehmet Ozalp

101 Questions You Asked about Islam

Religion

ISBN 978-1-921556-83-8 352 pp pb $26.95

World Rights, French rights sold to Les Editions Tawhid

Islam is the religion of one in five people on earth, yet it is the most misunderstood. This book is an effort to create a better understanding about Islam. It answers 101 commonly asked questions and gives clear and concise information about the faith and practices of Islam.

“This book offers painstakingly precise and well sourced details about a myriad of aspects of Islamic belief and practice… offering education to a world that too often prefers stereotype and the culture of blame.” Professor Terence Lovat, Pro Vice-Chancellor, The University of Newcastle

“This should be compulsory reading for anyone who feels they have a right to talk about Islam.” Bruce Elder, SMH Spectrum

Mehmet Ozalp was born in Turkey in 1968 and migrated to Australia in 1984. He has been involved in interfaith activities since 1991. He has written material for a number of courses on Islam. He lives in Sydney.

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Dr John England

Kickstart Recharge Your Life with a Pacemaker or Defibrillator

Health / Self-help

ISBN 978-1-921556-40-1 / 160 pp / $24.95 / World rights

Published: October 2013

New, revised edition : February 2015

Kickstart is a collection of personal narratives drawn from Dr John England’s patients who are recipients of pacemakers and from the doctor’s own experience. As a cardiologist, and having had his own pacemaker for 37 years, Dr England has a unique insight into the issues facing pacemaker patients, from medical transparency and responsibility to the emotional support and encouragement which is so important in these cases. The book is informative, inspirational, and at times humorous. It is intended for new and old recipients, and contains detailed knowledge about the technology: its history, how it works and how to make the most of the available support.

Dr John England runs a private practice in the Blue Mountains where he looks after 500 people with pacemakers. He is currently ‘on’ his fifth pacemaker since his first was implanted in 1976. Dr England has actively campaigned for improved local health services in the Blue Mountains for many years. In 2003, he received the Centenary Medal for long and outstanding medical service to the Blue Mountains community.

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