Ruth Park
Ruth Park | |
---|---|
Born | Rosina Ruth Lucia Park 24 August 1917 Auckland, New Zealand |
Died | 14 December 2010 Sydney, Australia | (aged 93)
Occupation | Author, novelist |
Language | English |
Notable works | The Harp in the South Playing Beatie Bow The Muddle-Headed Wombat |
Notable awards | Miles Franklin Award (1977) |
Spouse | D'Arcy Niland |
Rosina Ruth Lucia Park AM (24 August 1917 – 14 December 2010)[1][2][3][4] was a New Zealand–born Australian author. Her best known works are the novels The Harp in the South (1948) and Playing Beatie Bow (1980), and the children's radio serial The Muddle-Headed Wombat (1951–1970), which also spawned a book series (1962–1982).
Personal history
Park was born in Auckland to a Scottish father and a Swedish mother. Her family later moved to the town of Te Kuiti further south in the North Island of New Zealand, living in isolated areas.[3]
During the Great Depression her working-class father did various jobs: he laboured on bush roads and bridges, worked as a driver, did government relief work and became a sawmill hand. Finally, he shifted back to Auckland, where he joined the workforce of a municipal council. The family occupied public housing, known in New Zealand as a state house, and money remained a scarce commodity. After attending a Catholic primary school, Park won a partial scholarship to secondary school, but her high-school education was broken by periods of being unable to afford to attend.[2] She also completed an external degree course at Auckland University.[5]
Park's first break as a professional writer came when she was hired by the Auckland Star newspaper as a journalist, but she found the assignments she was given unchallenging. Wishing to expand her horizons, she accepted a job offer from the San Francisco Examiner, but the tightening of United States' entry requirements after the bombing of Pearl Harbour forced a change of plan. Instead, she moved to Sydney, Australia, in 1942, where she had lined up a job with another newspaper.
That same year she married the budding Australian author D'Arcy Niland (1917–1967), whom she had met on a previous visit to Sydney, and embarked on a career as a freelance writer. Park and Niland had five children. The youngest, twin daughters Kilmeny and Deborah, went on to become book illustrators.[5] (Park was devastated when Niland died in Sydney at the age of 49 from a heart ailment; Kilmeny also predeceased her — see Herald obituary.) Park had eleven grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Writing career
When contracted in 1942 by Ida Elizabeth Osbourne to write a serial for the ABC Children's Session, she wrote the series The Wide-awake Bunyip. When the lead actor Albert Collins died suddenly in 1951, she changed its direction and The Muddle-Headed Wombat was born, with first Leonard Teale then John Ewart in the title role. The series ended when the radio program folded in 1970. Such was its popularity that between 1962 and 1982 she wrote a series of children's books about the character.[6]
Her first novel was The Harp in the South (1948) – a graphic story of Irish slum life in Sydney, which has been translated into 37 languages. Even though it was acclaimed by literary critics, the book proved controversial with sections of the public due to its candour, with some newspaper letter-writers calling it a cruel fantasy because as far as they were concerned, there were no slums in Sydney. However, the newly married Park and Niland did live for a time in a Sydney slum located in the rough inner-city suburb of Surry Hills and vouched for the novel's accuracy. It has never been out of print.
Park built on her initial success with the 1949 publication of a follow-up novel titled the Poor Man's Orange. During the 1950s, despite the demands of raising a family, she wrote tirelessly. According to a 2010 tribute article printed in The Sydney Morning Herald and written by her literary agent Tim Curnow, she produced more than 5000 radio scripts alone during this decade, as well as contributing numerous articles to newspapers and magazines and penning weightier works of fiction.
She subsequently wrote Missus (1985), a prequel to The Harp in the South, among other novels, and created scripts for film and television. Her autobiographies, A Fence Around the Cuckoo (1992) and Fishing in the Styx (1993), deal with her life in New Zealand and Australia respectively. She also penned a novel set in New Zealand, One-a-pecker, Two-a-pecker (1957), about gold mining in Otago. (Later, it was renamed The Frost and The Fire.)
Park never remarried. Between 1946 and 2004, she received numerous awards for her contributions to literature in both Australia and internationally.[7] She was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 1987. (Her awards and honours are listed below.)
From 1974 to 1981 Park dwelt on Norfolk Island where she was the co-owner of a shop which sold books and gifts. Her later years, however, were spent living in the Sydney harbourside suburb of Mosman. She died in her sleep on 14 December 2010, at the age of 93.
Awards
- 1946 in the inaugural Sydney Morning Herald-sponsored writers' competition, she won the Best Novel award for The Harp in the South (which would not be published, however, until 1948)
- 1954 Catholic Book Club Choice selected Serpent's Delight
- 1961 in the inaugural Commonwealth Television Play Competition run by the Lew Grade Organisation the British award for television play won for No Decision, with D'Arcy Niland
- 1962 Children's Book Council of Australia (CBCA) Children's Book of the Year Award, highly commended for The Hole in the Hill
- 1975 CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award, highly commended for Callie's Castle
- 1977 Miles Franklin Award for Swords and Crowns and Rings
- 1977 National Book Council highly commended for Swords and Crowns and Rings
- 1979 CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award, highly commended for Come Danger, Come Darkness
- 1981 CBCA Children's Book of the Year Award won the Playing Beatie Bow
- 1981 NSW Premier's Literary Awards, Ethel Turner Prize for young people's literature won for When the Wind Changed
- 1982 Parents' Choice Award for Literature won for Playing Beatie Bow, awarded by the Parents' Choice Foundation
- 1982 Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Playing Beatie Bow[8]
- 1982 International Board on Books for Young People (Australia) won the Honour Diploma for Playing Beatie Bow
- 1982 Guardian Fiction Prize (UK) runner up for Playing Beatie Bow
- 1986 Young Australians' Best Book Award for a picture book for When the Wind Changed (illustrated by Deborah Niland)
- 1987 Member of the Order of Australia (AM) bestowed for services to literature[9]
- 1992 The Age Book of the Year, Non-Fiction Award won for A Fence around the Cuckoo
- 1992 Colin Roderick Award won for A Fence around the Cuckoo, presented with the H.T. Priestley Meda(Townsville Foundation for Australian Literary Studies Award)[citation needed]
- 1993 Tilly Aston Award for Braille Book of the Year won for A Fence around the Cuckoo[citation needed]
- 1993 Talking Book of the Year Award (Royal Blind Society) won for A Fence around the Cuckoo
- 1993 Talking Book of the Year Award (Royal Blind Society) won for Fishing in the Styx
- 1993 Awarded the Lloyd O'Neil Magpie Award for services to the Australian book industry [citation needed]
- 1994 Canberra's Own Outstanding List (CBCA COOL Award) won for Playing Beatie Bow
- 1994 Awarded Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of New South Wales [citation needed]
- 1994 Fellowship of Australian Writers Christina Stead Award won for Home Before Dark [citation needed]
- 1996 Bilby Award, Young Reader Award won for When the Wind Changed (illustrated by Deborah Niland)
- 2004 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards won the Special Award
- 2006 listed in the Bulletin's 100 most influential Australians[10]
- 2008 Dromkeen Medal[11]
Bibliography
Novels
See also
References
- ^ The Australian, 18 December 2010
- ^ a b Maunder, Patricia (17 December 2010). "Novelist shone a light on slums". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 December 2010.
- ^ a b "Ruth Park Biography". Austlit Agent Details. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
- ^ She always refused to confirm the actual date, and the published information varies from 1917 to 1924 (Source: Pegasus Book Orphanage)
- ^ a b Ruth Park: "Becoming a Writer" Retrieved 5 November 2015
- ^ The Golden Age of the Argonauts Rob Johnson, Hodder & Stoughton 1997 ISBN 0-7336-0528-1
- ^ "Ruth Park: A Celebration". National Library of Australia. Archived from the original on 6 September 2006. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
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Ruth Park: A Celebration (1996), PDF, 41 pages. - ^ "Boston Globe–Horn Book Awards, Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present". The Horn Book Inc. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
- ^ "Its an Honour". Australian Government. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
- ^ "The 100 most influential Australians". The Sydney Morning Herald, 27 June 2006. 27 June 2006. Retrieved 1 August 2007.
- ^ So much more than Wombat's mum Sydney Morning Herald obituary
External links
- Official website
- Ruth Park (1999–2000) by Kilmeny NILAND National Portrait Gallery (Australia) (Retrieved 11 June 2014)
- Park, Ruth (1917–2010) in the The Encyclopedia of Women and Leadership in Twentieth-Century Australia
- Ruth Park at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Ruth Park at Libraries Australia Authorities, with catalogue search (login required)
- Ruth Park at Library of Congress, with 48 library catalogue records
- 1917 births
- 2010 deaths
- Australian children's writers
- New Zealand emigrants to Australia
- New Zealand writers
- Miles Franklin Award winners
- Members of the Order of Australia
- People from Auckland
- People from Te Kuiti
- 20th-century Australian novelists
- 20th-century women writers
- Women children's writers
- Australian women novelists