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One Hell of a good yarn.' Sunday Herald Sun.
'A. distinctly Australian voice. 'Canberra Times.
What Next You Bastard may well prove to have rqore layers ~
of appeal than a mille feuille ....a narrative packed with incident,
villains and comedy. There s nothing of the victim in Hall. His
mother was feisty and so is her son. A keen appreciation of the
comic, everywhere evident in the story, with a capacity for lateral
thinking that enabled him not only to hide his disability but to wreak
a poetic revenge on some of his persecutors, keeps him dancing
through the narrative. His is certainly a story that needed to be told...
His collaborator McFerran has demonstrated just the right kind of
literacy to tell the tale.'
Mary Rose Liverani, The Australian.
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Subjects
Chronically ill children, Biography, Education, Illiterate persons, HistoryPeople
Ken Hall (1940-)Places
AustraliaEdition | Availability |
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1
What next you bastard: an autobiography
2001, Hale & Iremonger
Paperback
in English
0868067059 9780868067056
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Book Details
First Sentence
"1. No way, not me! My childhood was very short. It ended soon after my twelfth birthday in early 1952, when I arrived flat on my back at the Royal Brisbane Hospital. Being sick was nothing new to me - I had been in and out of hospitals ever since I was born - only this time they didn't take me to the children's wing. Rules were rules. When you turned twelve you were an adult, and that meant the men's ward for me. What hit me first was the terrible silence. I was used to the sounds of children laughing and crying and calling for their mothers to come and make it all better. Even a room full of sick children has a feeling of life and hope and future, and that funny mixture of happiness and sadness when friends get well enough to go home. Ward 1A had none of that. It had bare walls and faded screens and a sour unfriendly smell. The only sounds I heard were the sick old men groaning and coughing, tossing and turning, afraid to sleep in case they never woke up again. Those who left the place didn't walk out. They were wrapped in a bedsheet and wheeled away on a tin trolley. Ward 1A was the terminal ward, but I didn't know that at the time."
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Feedback?December 7, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
April 28, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Linked existing covers to the work. |
March 16, 2010 | Edited by WorkBot | update details |
December 10, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |