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Bryce Courtenay is one of Australia's most commercially successful authors. However, only ''The Power of One'' has been published in the ]. Courtenay claims that this is because "American publishers for the most part have difficulties about Australia, they are interested in books in their own country first and foremost. However, we receive many e-mails and letters from Americans who have read my books and I am hoping in the future that publishers will recognize that there is a market for all my books in the U.S." | Bryce Courtenay is one of Australia's most commercially successful authors. However, only ''The Power of One'' has been published in the ]. Courtenay claims that this is because "American publishers for the most part have difficulties about Australia, they are interested in books in their own country first and foremost. However, we receive many e-mails and letters from Americans who have read my books and I am hoping in the future that publishers will recognize that there is a market for all my books in the U.S." | ||
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==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 06:52, 25 March 2009
Bryce Courtenay (born 14 August 1933) is a South African-born Australian novelist. Born in Johannesburg, he spent most of his early years in a small village in the Lebombo Mountains in South Africa's Limpopo province.
In 1955, while studying journalism in London, Bryce met his future wife, Benita, and eventually emigrated to Australia. They married in 1959 and had three sons, Brett, Adam and Damon. In 1991, Damon had haemophilia and died at age 24 from AIDS, contracted through a blood transfusion.
Bryce divorced Benita in 2000 and acknowledged to some indiscretions during their 42-year marriage. He now lives in Bowral, New South Wales, with his partner, Christine Gee. Benita Courtenay died on 11th March 2007, at the age of 72, four months after being diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia.
His novels are primarily set in either Australia, his adopted country, or South Africa, the country of his birth. His first book, The Power of One, was published in 1989 and, despite Courtenay's fears that it would never sell, quickly became one of Australia's best-selling books by any living author. The story has since been made into a film - as well as being re-released in a version fit for children to read.
Bryce Courtenay is one of Australia's most commercially successful authors. However, only The Power of One has been published in the United States. Courtenay claims that this is because "American publishers for the most part have difficulties about Australia, they are interested in books in their own country first and foremost. However, we receive many e-mails and letters from Americans who have read my books and I am hoping in the future that publishers will recognize that there is a market for all my books in the U.S."
Bibliography
- The Power of One (1989)
- Tandia (1992)
- April Fool's Day (1993)
- Recipe for Dreaming (1994)
- The Power of One to One (1995)
- The Potato Factory (1995)
- Tommo & Hawk (1997)
- The Family Frying Pan (1997)
- The Stranger Inside: An Erotic Adventure (1997)
- Yowie Series (1997)
- Jessica (1998)
- The Night Country (1998)
- The Power of One Young Reader's Edition (1999)
- Solomon's Song (1999)
- Four Fires (2001)
- Smoky Joe's Cafe (2001)
- Matthew Flinders' Cat (2002)
- Brother Fish (2004)
- Whitethorn (2005)
- Sylvia (2006)
- The Persimmon Tree (2007)
- Fishing for Stars (2008)
References
- Sharp, Annette (2007). "Sad Serenade for Courtenay". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 25-03-2009.
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External sources
- Find Bryce Courtenay in Libraries Australia - click on the name 'Heading' to find related works in 800+ Australian library collections
- Official Bryce Courtenay Website
- Bryce on Jim Ball's radio program
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Bryce Courtenay" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
- Articles lacking sources from February 2007
- Anglo-African people
- Australian novelists
- British Book Awards
- Copywriters
- Old Edwardians (Johannesburg)
- People from Limpopo Province
- People from New South Wales
- South African expatriates in the United Kingdom
- South African immigrants to Australia
- South African writers
- 1933 births
- Living people