Saturday, April 15, 2023


 

A GRIPPING STORY OF ENDURANCE


This heart-warming and intriguing novel
will have you cheering for Ms Bennett as she navigates away from an unhappy marriage towards a new love!
The Five Lives of Ms Bennett is a historical, coming-of-age, family saga. It’s about the struggle of a young Australian girl, fed up with her hometown life, only to find that the big city doesn’t exactly hold the dreams she wishes for.

Themes

  • Love doesn’t always find a way.
  • Marrying outside of one’s culture elicits problems.
  • Nationality differences exhibit cultural bias and prejudice on both sides.
  • Five Lives: Five Decades

  • Includes early Australian history, references to colonial heritage, Australia in the fifties, sixties and seventies.
  • The domestic roles of women.
  • Post war lifestyle and conditions.
  • Women’s cottage industries.

  • In the extension of Ms Bennett’s contemporary lives there are issues such as family loyalty and trust, the vagaries of money and wealth, family jealousy and fraud, domestic violence, alcoholism, rights to education, equality and freedom for women.

    My novel can be found on Amazon

    Friday, February 17, 2023


    The Five Lives of Ms Bennett is a novel that I wrote for my Masters in Writing, way back in 2006. Under a different title the manuscript has remained as they say "in the bottom drawer". In 2022, I spent time in a Fellowship at the Katharine Susannah Prichard Writers Centre (Greenmount WA) changing all the mixed tenses to all 'present' tense.  I have submitted the novel to various publishers (one rejection received), also applied to a 2023 Westerly Mid-Career Fellowship, sending part of the narrative on the 1st life of Alice Bennett, however I doubt my chances as there are so many better writers out there than me. Anyway, here is an excerpt from the novel & the one I sent to Westerly.

    Grandma’s Chocolate Tin

    Story 1:           Stories from the olden days 

    Gran shuffles the old photos in her chocolate tin. When she draws a cracked photo from underneath the pile, the old woman withdraws into other corridors. Three men in full uniform, double-breasted velvet jackets and high boots, have their heads bowed. Particleboard lies beneath their feet. Steps lead to battered doors; in a side annex, minor scorching. One man is smoking a rollie. The rest look pitiful, shoulders and mouths drooped. Her granddaughter thinks the burnt building resembles the black-stick house near the beach.

    Alice waits for Gran to call her nickname; twirls her three bangles, watching for signs that Gran’s eyelids have lifted. She has come to know this scene, the charcoal in the grate sparking a new flame with just a little prod. She counts her grandmother’s stitches, the number of times the right forefinger loops the wool, clicking her heels and tapping her leather shoes on the concrete path. In this place together, they are apart. Alice bumps her grandmother, making her drop stitches. In the silence, she plucks blades of buffalo grass, crisscrosses them like a paddle-pop raft. An old straw hat balances on the geraniums. She thinks Grandpa might soon jump back into the picture. 

    ‘Is this where you had the pump?’ asks Alice, pointing to the old tank-stand. More clacking, the scrunching sound of wool escaping as Edith unwinds the ball from her knitting bag. ‘I used to play under there, Gran. Look here, Gran.’ Alice taps the tank stand with a long piece of doweling. ‘With matchsticks. I lit one.’

    ‘You didn’t want to start a fire, did you?’ Edith raises her eyes over the rims of her glasses.

    ‘Nah. Not really.’ Alice sprawls close to her grandmother and snips clover with the scissors. ‘Did you ever see a really big fire with Grandpa in that fire engine?’

    ‘No, women weren’t allowed.’

    ‘Oh.’

    ‘It was bad luck in those days.’

    ‘Why?’

    ‘There was always bad luck.’

    ‘I like firing matches. Whoosh!’ she giggles, imitating the strike.

    ‘Don’t you dare, Alice, or I’ll tell your father.’

    Alice twirls her pink hoop until it catches on her cardigan. She leans back on the top step, placing herself inside the plastic toy.

    ‘I made ‘em plenty of cups of tea in my day,’ says Edith, resting her skeins. ‘They was always awake because of me.’

    ‘Was this your house, Gran?’ says Alice, holding the photo.

    ‘Yep. See those roses out the front, every colour of the rainbow. I loved that old house and garden. Trouble was it was too far from the beach.’ Edith wrestles an aching foot and straightens. ‘Fire Station used to be an old barn till they renovated it. Your grandfather spent long hours in there, checking and re-checking the equipment, tuning the pumps and making the truck ready, just in case.  It was one problem after the other.’

    ‘Did he burn his fingers?’

    ‘He got his whiskers singed plenty of times. I remember the big one. It was a miserable job. Half the Spit Junction was burning. Like a wood-yard, your grandfather said, full of timber ready to go.’

    Alice imagines a bush fire like the logs that tumble and fall in the lounge-room grate. She likes the sound of snapping wood that sends sparks up the chimney. She is glad, too, that Gran is still making scones and cups of tea for her, that everything is much the same; except they don’t have a fire engine to climb on, or a garden of roses.

    ‘I don’t know why, but he kept these journals.’ Edith lifts the book from the bottom of the suitcase, dog-eared pages falling from stitches. ‘Here’s a good story,’ she says, balancing the large book across both their knees. ‘It’ll help you understand your grandfather.’

     

    Warringah: Griffin Road, 1934. Minor property damage.

    When we got there the hill along Griffin Road was yellow and smoky. Left Laurie and Bill in charge of the hose checked out the back of the sheds. The fire was already frisky in the button grass. Luckily the lantana and eucalypts further in hadn’t gone up yet. A lad from the factory rolled up with his truck to help the owner remove some crates from a big stores shed. A few fences needed to be soaked. I got the volunteers onto that one. A strong nor-westerly blowing didn’t help things much. The stacked drums, full of petrol, kerosene and turpentine was our biggest worry. We could hear the petrol simmering inside, the drums swelling with the heated pressure. All the boys and I could do was try and keep the drums cool. We were under control as the other men outside and further up in the long grass begun to get onto the fire and we won the fight.

    ‘Oh, goody, they won.’

    ‘Yep. They won that day, but the next week there was all hell to play. The storekeeper, old Snowy, came skidding up on his motorbike in front of the house while I was in the yard. Well, he rang the bell and woke the men. The fire started down at the Surf Club where they kept all the surfboats and boards. There was a fish and chip shop, a tackle shop. The whole lot might have gone up.’

    Alice waits, as Gran wipes the ridges of her eyes. 

    ‘There were people everywhere, sirens wailing, women, old fellas, boys outside the double doors. Of course, they weren’t allowed in. They just ran with the fire truck all the way up Evans Street, dogs yapping at the tyres. I noticed your grandfather was having trouble with his pants and belt, but didn’t take any notice. The men soon found he wasn’t well. He was slumped over his office chair; coat half off, ledger books all over the floor. In the panic of it all, they took him to the doctor’s first. Had to wake him up. Doc kept shaking their hands. The boys said he was pleased it wasn’t his place going up.’

     


     

    Tuesday, January 3, 2023



    One of the things I learnt in 2022 was to upload my 2 poetry collection to KDP. This acronym is called Kindle Direct Publishing. They also have a program where the reader can enjoy up to 2,000 books at any one time (last time I looked) for a minimum fee of $13.99 per month (Australia). If you're a voracious reader and have a kindle or ipad this is an extremely good deal. Most books usually cost between $20 to $25 (AU), so this works out to a fraction of the cost.

    I know that poetry lovers like writing poetry, reading poetry, using poetry at sensitive times like at weddings and funerals, but not many "BUY" poetry. I think they are missing out, as authors have spent a long time studying poetry, gone to great pains to increase their word knowledge and have learnt how to condense languare into minute story parts. They say it's one of the hardest genres to write, and it is time consuming with little reward. One of the reasons why I moved over to writing novels.

    So now any readers out there, if you're engaged in the Kindle Unlimited program, my 2 poetry books are ebooks and are available for $0.00 in the program - for three months commencing on 1/1/2023.

    I would love to see some sales. 70% @ $2.99 equates to approx. $2.10 (AU) in royalties. AND I won't be laughing all the way to the bank. :)

    MY BOOKS ON KINDLE

    Monday, December 19, 2022

    After waiting two years with an interruption due to Covid lockdowns and WA border closures, I spent time as a writer-in-residence at Eramboo Artist Environment in Terrey Hills, Sydney. While I was there I conducted a Poetry Workshop in Ekphrastic Poetry. An ekphrastic poem is a vivid description of a scene or, more commonly, a work of art. Through the imaginative act of narrating and reflecting on the “action” of a painting or sculpture, the poet may amplify and expand its meaning. A notable example is “Ode on a Grecian Urn,” in which the poet John Keats speculates on the identity of the lovers who appear to dance and play music, simultaneously frozen in time and in perpetual motion.

                        I also met other artists in particular Julie Bartholomew, a Ceramic artist and                           educator. We were neighbours on either side of the studios and could talk to one                     another through the partioning.



    My Writing Fellowship at The Katharine Susannah Writers Centre - October 2022 

     

    I feel so lucky and extremely proud to have spent time at the KSP in my October Fellowship. Two weeks went quickly and in that time I completed a re-working of my MA novel (2009) renaming the fictional memoir *The Five Lives of Ms Bennett*. It was a huge effort to change the mixed tenses to all present tense. And although I haven’t changed the story, I feel that it reads better. Also using Text-to-Speech has been a marvellous editing tool. You’d be surprised how many errors and mistakes you can hear. Also during my time in the hills, I shopped in Mundaring, had a coffee at the Lazy Corner Café, shopped at Coles West Swan, walked the West Swan Railway track (5 times) went, oh shame, only two days swimming at the Bilgoman Aquatic Pool (October the weather was also cold).

    I had a great time conducting my *Crime* Workshop – “So Why Not Turn to Crime”. Six participants were all into the crime genre and there was much discussion about dead bodies, murder, Agatha Christie, Hercule Poirot, editing, crime audio books and a great sharing of their writing exercise. I believe the writers went away feeling good about attending. We went over time so that’s a good indication.

    Saturday, September 3, 2022




    READERS!   You can purchase my novel The Ozone Cafe for $0.00 on Kindle Unlimited. This is a program designed to help authors and offers readers a wide selection of ebooks up to 40 to borrow for $14.99. I think it's a good deal as while my book is on offer for free, apparently, I will still get 70% of the Kindle cost $11.53 as royalties.  I have joined for two months, enough time to guage whether the book has generated some interest. I am also amongst about a zillion other books and hundreds about cafes so the odds are against me. I just need one or two readers out there in the WWW (World wide Web) to read and review. I sound like I'm begging don't I?  Not really, I'm just trying all sorts of things to keep the novel relevant. This program is part of my ongoing promotion and if I don't do it, no one else will. 


    Bream Street: circa 1946

     Part 1

    It was perhaps the first time a freezing sensation had overwhelmed him. Age had run into his iron bones and most days he couldn’t get out of bed. Not that anyone would notice, living alone all these years and he’d left retirement too late. It was only the fishing in Satara Bay that had kept him going, his beach cottage central to everything, and his blue-aproned chums. He couldn’t bear that terrible noise again in his head; a bell was ringing pulled by a string. He didn’t want this to happen tonight. Not tonight at the Grand Master’s presentation. How many years had it been?  Seven, he recollected, seven slow years waiting for the position of Vice-Grand Master. All eyes would turn on him. Stan the Man, they jokingly called him. But when it came to his carpentry skills, they almost bowed in adoration.

       He dressed in his Masonic regalia, and opened his case checking the contents. The details were there for the Spring Ball, his launch speech, invitations to dignitaries, parents and members. He patted the envelope before clicking the locks. He would be proud to introduce the debutants.

        It was only 6 o’clock, so he decided to take a leisurely detour to the Esplanade Hotel, have one or two pints for Dutch courage.

       The terrible noise started again, more than one bell. He was still cold. Winter that silent oppressor. He sat in the beer garden looking out to sea. He couldn’t make out the demarcation line of the horizon with a rising mist coming in, the edges of sky and ocean near the Heads melding into one landscape.

       He hummed an old Irish tune. When he finished his second pint he started walking towards the shops, past the Diggers’ hall, the housie-housie shed and finally turned into the front yard of the Masonic Lodge.

       ‘Nice evening, Stan,’ said an old friend, slowly ascending the steps with a wooden cane.

       ‘How’s the back?’ asked Stan.

       ‘Oh, you know,’ he replied, knocking out one of his legs to keep moving, ‘can’t complain.’

       The ceremony began at 8 o’clock with a three-course meal. After two new Apprentices had been initiated into the Kingdom, it was time for the presentation. This time, Stan could hear an orchestra of bells where there was none. He managed to be bold and so stood behind the microphone, a little wobbly at first. It was his duty to swear allegiance to the brotherhood; to wear the colors of Vice-Grand Master with pride.

       A growing tiredness overcame him, and giving his excuses he left the Masonic Hall alone. A thick fog covered the sleeping town, and at almost midnight, intervals of rain began spotting the pavement and the blue of his coat. He hurried home.

       When he arrived on the landing of his front porch, he sensed someone in the shadows. There were no street lights and something stirred behind in the dark. Silhouettes and shapes in the gloomy night, then a heavy army of three men dominated his bent frame. He moved his arms out to stop them, but their wild punches struck. He could not fight them off.  Beyond some distant shore, Stan the Man knew that all the bells had stopped.


    Saturday, August 27, 2022


    My 2 poetry collections are now available on Kindle, Evangelyne & other poems and of Arc & Shadow. [They are even cheaper than a cup of coffee!]
    Poetry is not so popular when it comes to the buying public, however after having bought American/International poetry collections  on Kindle 
    such as Mary Oliver, Li Po, Ted Kooser, Billy Collins, Lorna Crozier, and Sharon Olds, I thought it was about time I would upload my (hard work) also to Kindle I Trends change and kids are always on their ipads. They’re the next generation of readers. Check out my Kindle Author Page, on Amazon where you can buy my 2 collections.

    This has now given me the impetus to publish all my  ”unpublished poetry” – it’s so fun to see your hard work on Kindle. It’s as if the work has been given a second life!  I have a collection of prose poetry titled Bounty and a children’s poetry collection, Miniscule, inspired by the French TV mini-series called Minuscule. I intend to self publish these two collections and possibly have both editions of print and ebook.

    Here is a sample of what's to come - a poem from Miniscule 






     

    Friday, March 11, 2022

    I have recently tried (once again) to create a reasonable book video of “unboxing books”. Not only have I spent a lot of time, and tried to edit out BLACK COCKATOOS (yes, loud rasping from them in a neighbour’s olive tree) in my first attempt, I also discovered that WORDPRESS made it difficult to upload in media, (haha although problem solved). In a recent post I managed to upload my video in the *text section*. Never give up folks!  



    So glad to share this space with you so that you can view my ”Unboxing Books” of the 2nd novel The Ozone Café, that has taken almost "14 YEARS!"

    Also, I do have two other BLOGS and have uploaded same video to https://helenhagemann.wordpress.com and https://helhagemann.blogspot.com/

    So, apart from these frustrating promotional ideas, I am quite excited to receive a number of copies of The Ozone Café and will have a book launch on Saturday 26th March, at the Kingsway Bar & Bistro @ 12.30pm.  Book signing/ $25 cash only. Bar tab. Covid restrictions must be seated & certified. All welcome!

    The novel can be purchased from me, the author on the “Buy Books” wordpress page & also from amazon.com.au  who offer a free postage deal.

    The Ozone Café is about three separate owners and the demise of the cafe through council corruption. Set in a fictional town north of Sydney, the author brings to the novel her memories of growing up in Ettalong Beach NSW and visiting the cafe as a teenager.

    From a review by Richard Regan on Amazon Australia. “At the heart of the novel is the Ozone Café itself, the loving creation of Italian migrant, Vincenzo Polamo, and treasured possession of its subsequent two owners. Their intertwined stories revolve around the café and the three local children whose images are immortalised in its courtyard mural.”

     

    Sunday, January 2, 2022

     
    My new novel is now available in Australia (included free postage for first buyer). Check it out at

    Amazon.com.au

    Also available from publishers Adelaide Books, New York, USA

    The following chapter (in part) is the construction of the cafe. 

                                                                Chapter 12

                                                                        

    After a few days the beery smell of the fermenting orange trees began to disappear. It took several truck loads to cart away the old house, taking with it the shed, the old laundry, bushes and two large palms.

        Vincenzo visited the site every day.  The concrete slab gradually turned into walls, and the walls grew upwards, and steel rods that were stressed into the first floor became the second story, then a third. By degrees, the café spread its tentacles of light and dark. And once where there had been an open blue sky, the space filled with windows and doors, the inside walls becoming a stark, white interior.

       There were days when the generator broke down, the men shouting at one another, joking around while waiting for renewed power. A constant noise fractured the Esplanade with screaming machines dispersing sounds of sawing, drilling, and banging. Added to this, Pomadina barked when a subcontractor’s dog yapped incessantly from the back of a ute.  

       Silence only existed out where the bay glowed, and when the rotating flash from the lighthouse descended on the walls and low rooms, a luminous moonlight painted a backdrop over everything that became solid by grace and spirit, by song and sovereignty. For house and home. For a café where there was none.

       Rennie advised Vincenzo that one wall had to come down. It had something to do with the lay of the land and compaction, but it was better to get it right. His account of the problem did not disturb Vincenzo. He was more than happy to observe the café taking shape, his spiral staircase, the strength of the building in rendered brick, the curved corridors of the upstairs bedrooms taking on an interesting chamber appearance. The structure became his space through the temporal vagaries of winter to spring, from spring to late spring, then early summer. A concert of colors went through his head as he began to design the main eating lounge in the café. Red. Red would be the color of table tops and benches, bringing warmth down into the area from the café’s one and only high ceiling.

       Vincenzo ordered light fittings, counter tops, four-seated cubicles with studded bench seats, a leather lounge suite and wall lamps. His main vice was the purchase of the best cooking equipment he could find in Sydney. He treated himself to Wiltshire knives, two fridges, Condor plates, cups and bowls, stainless steel pots and pans. He ordered a top-class espresso coffee machine made in Italy and purchased a twin oven from a local supplier. Closer to the building’s completion, he chose an off-white paint for the exterior of the building and a cream vanilla for the interior. 


    Saturday, December 25, 2021


     

    The Personal Story behind the Ozone Café

    The old black & white photographs might reveal a little of the setting of my 2nd novel The Ozone Café.  The literary world often states for writers, “write what you know”. I have used my hometown in the setting of the novel, however the names have been changed to protect…yes no novelist wants to be sued or face undue litigation esp. when one writes about a corrupt shire. It was common knowledge in the area, that because the Ozone Café sat on prime property (a stone’s throw from the beach), it attracted the moguls and thus disappeared through dubious means.


    Ettalong was and has always been a small community lifestyle: a population of less than 5,000, an older community with shopfronts like the cake shop, chemist, newsagents, banks and supermarket. It hasn’t changed in 50 years. There’s fishing, prawning, oysters in the myriad of waterways that is known as Broken Bay which sprawls to Gosford and is known as the Brisbane Water District. What has replaced the café is a very large monolith resort-type building that I understand is not liked nor valued by the locals. Well, it’s a holiday venue for the “rich”.


    I went to Ettalong Primary, and then later attended Gosford High School. As a teenager and even younger I frequented the café with girlfriends, esp.one in particular named, Heather. We would have a milkshake, buy lollies, click on the jukebox and if we had any money left we’d slide a twenty shilling piece into one of the pinball machines. Looking back, it was actually a challenge to enter the Ozone café as it was daily occupied by Bodgies and Widgies. They were the rock-n-roll gangs of the sixties, rather harmless, but I guess it was the leather jackets, the chewing gum and sneers that made you feel uncomfortable. Nevertheless, the café was so close to the beach, that after a swim that being hungry we often bought an icy-pole or ice-cream. So, my local teenage haunt was a vivid memory that I would never forget.

    When my younger brother, still living in the area, told me that the Ozone had been pulled down, I wanted to write the story of life inside its walls and its ultimate destruction.

    The Ozone Café, with three separate owners therefore, is the nemesis of my story and its demise through council corruption.

    Saturday, December 11, 2021


    The Ozone Café, a historical novel with three separate owners, is about the café’s demise through council corruption.

    Vincenzo Polamo, a Calabrian, builds the Ozone Café with his builder-brother in 1957 in fictional Satara Bay. He meets three children, Winifred, Casey, and Nicolas, creating a seascape mural on a café wall that includes them. The café changes from Italian to Australian cuisine. However, due to long hours of hard work and Vincenzo’s wife unwilling to migrate to Australia, Vincenzo sells the café.

    Joe Pendlebury suffers setbacks with too few customers, poor health and problems due to a violent storm causing structural damage close to the mural.  In major scenes, Pendlebury goes missing, and Nicolas dies from muscular dystrophy, heightening Winifred’s concerns to keep the mural sacred.

    Con & Dion Lasaridis experience problems with the damage. Unable to convince the Heystbury Shire the café is sound after a rebuild, they lose ownership in a court battle; the Shire evoking a Demolition Order, 1946. The Lasaridis believe this is due to an undercurrent of well-known council corruption; Mayor Tyrone being a principal player in corrupt land and property dealings. Vincenzo (et al) removes the mural reinstating it at his home. The mural becomes a lasting memorial to Nicolas Battersby, as well as the sole surviving piece of The Ozone Café.

    Available soon on Amazon & Adelaide Books, New York

     

     

    Monday, November 29, 2021

    This post is mainly to alert Australian authors about my UNPLEASANT experience using the services of Kirkus Reviews to attract a national, US or international readership.

    You may have seen the Australian eBay advertisement on TV called eBay Tuesday where customers who do not use eBay are denigrated. The actor’s spiel is a mantra called, RIPPED OFF, ROZ.  Let me tell you if I were to do an advertisement on KIRKUS REVIEWS I would use the same spiel, yes – this author is a RIPPED OFF, ROZ!

    Several, well in the main, disadvantages that I have faced by getting published in the United States, New York City, has been due to COVID,  the lockdown events, its restrictions, and the disadvantages of being unable to achieve an American promotion of my novel over there.

    Unable to travel to New York, I sought the services of KIRKUS REVIEWS.  Firstly, I paid for a review. It was so, so. In the opening sentence, my young couple were “feckless”. The rest was slighly positive, except for the very negative comment by the reviewer saying it was :-

    An often entertaining, if unevenly executed, tale of the extraordinary lengths that people can go in pursuit of their dreams.

    That didn’t bode well for me, since the idea of a review is to sell the book, esp. in the US. I thanked Kirkus Reviews for their effort, but $400 later, I now realise I was a RIPPED OFF, ROZ!

    My other effort was to place a book advert on their website. $1,600 later, I was again a RIPPED OFF, ROZ!  Not only didn’t the ad appear the first time, the 2nd time on contacting them asking for a refund, OR what transpired was a second screening in November. Again, the advertisement which was meant to be on several pages as follows, Homepage 970×250: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/ (third integrated) – Review pages 970×250: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/discover-books/fiction  (third integrated) – News and Features 970×250: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/news-and-features/genres/fiction/ (third integrated)  -Book List 970×250: https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-lists/ (third integrated) – only appeared a couple of times on “DISCOVER BOOKS” – a quick flash and it was gone! I spent hours scrolling through only to find it twice - once near their magazine and the other above a novel by Isabel Allende.

    I have since written to Kirkus, complained that the ad should have been a fixed/static showing for 2 weeks, and asked the ad girl to let the company know about my book ad expectations and criticisms. Of course, a RIPPED OFF, ROZ, should not complain to an American Company – how dare she!

    So folks, save your money. Don’t use KIRKUS REVIEWS as your book advertisement will only be A FLASH IN THE PAN,  that neither ‘you” or ‘book buyers’ will see.

     

     

    Saturday, November 6, 2021

    I am pleased to announce that in October 2022 I will be spending time as a KSP Fellowship recipient for rwo weeks working on my next novel *The Tattooed City* /Tattoo City (a working title).

    I was not expecting to receive my acceptance email as the Katharine Sussanah Pritchard Writers Centre is highly competitive and prestigious. The centre has announced all the successful writers. They are: Demelza Carlton, Anne de Monchaux, Terena Boniwell, Leni Shilton, Shannon Meyerkort, Mark Keenan, Leigh-Michel Hobbs, Brooke Dunnell, Trish Versteegen, Karen Herbert, Jacie Anderson, Emma Hall, Miranda Luby, Emma Pignatiello, Anna Fursland, Narelle Hill, Ashleigh Hardcastle,  Danijela Kambaskovic-Schwartz, Adele Tan, Kylie Boltin and Helen Hagemann.

    March 2020  - May 2022

    Prior to Covid-19 I was accepted into the Eramboo Artist Environment and was to spend three weeks
    working on my novel *The Ozone Cafe*.  My position is still valid & awaiting my presence.Hopefully I will be able to attend the centre sometime in 2022.  So Mark McGowan (Premier) I am hoping that you open the West Australian borders in time for me to arrange my trip to Terrey Hills, NSW - without quarantining, without wearing a mask and that my two Covid shots will allow me to travel, freely!

    Saturday, July 10, 2021

     

    While I'm on the other side of the country (I wish I could march), I am very supportive of women who have come forward with reports of sexual assault, violence, rape, and harassment in the workplace. It appears that we all need to band together FOR MUTUAL SUPPORT. I am a writer and will continue to speak my piece here on this blog. It may go unnoticed, but at least I am a small voice in the dark saying, too!  "ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!"

    Two main things have caught my attention recently and that is the Honourable Kate Sullivan - inspired by Brittany Higgins, one of Australian parliament's longest-serving women has come forward with sexual assault allegations for her time spent in the Old Parliament House. She was a Liberal parliamentarian for 27 or so years, serving through the Whitlam, Fraser, Hawke, Keating and Howard.governments.

    Totally inspired most recently that Kate has been included in the ABC's July 2021 documentary with Annabel Crabb.titled "MS REPRESENTED". I did look for review sites to add my comments, but alas none were forthcoming, not unless I joined a myriad of websites like MMB Ltd, but who has the time to join etc. etc.? 

    SARAH HANSON YOUNG 
    did us women proud on MS REPRESENTED. There she was in Parliament naming the politicians who harass, invade privacy and who are drunk in Parliament, pointing the finger at their irreprehensible behaviour including Cory Bernardi.  I am so proud to call myself a Greens voter and very proud of that young woman who stood her ground and told it like it should be told. Firm, tough, strong, eloquent, calling them LESS THAN MEN. I stood up in my lounge room and clapped continually, then rewound (on iview catch-up) and watched her performance several times. So proud and heartwarming to see her actions in this  #METOO - TOXIC ENVIRONMENT a Greens Senator who can give those dudes some necessary scthick.

    JULIA GILLARD, KATE SULLIVAN, BRONWYN BISHOP, ROS KELLY, PENNY WONG, LINDA BURNEY, ANNE ALY, NATASHA STOTT DESPOJA, AMANDA VANSTONE, MARGARET REYNOLDS, JUDITH TROETH, AND JULIE BISHOP - You were all fantastic.

    Read The Big Hush my previous post on Brittany Higgins & Dorothy Hewett (1923 – 2002) 

    Acknowledgements: to the ABC (good program),BBC and the Guardian, thanks guys!

    Sunday, June 27, 2021

    The Dorothy Hewett Award - Name remains by UWA

     In our current #METOO generation, for the life of me, I cannot understand why the University of UWA hasn't changed the title of their manuscript award. I wrote a letter back in 2018 insisting that they change the name of the award, only to be fobbed off. It smells like corruption! It seems to me, and it's only speculation, but in "speaking out" about their mother's pedophile pimping when they were children, Hewett's daughters must have been threatened by some hierarchy in the literature world, esp. a well-know publisher.  And how many women in high prestige jobs has this happened to? Just thousands folks!

    BRITTANY HIGGINS  - Another #MeToo - A quote from the ABC. Ms Higgins had originally decided not to pursue a complaint with police as she felt that the pressure of going public about the rape "would affect her job". 

    Brittany Higgins has alleged being raped by a federal staffer in Parliament House, and the matter is now due for the courts. And "justice matters". Since speaking publicly about the allegations, she has referred the matter to the Australian Federal Police.Says ABC news. "The ACT's Director of Public Prosecutions Shane Drumgold confirmed he received a partial brief of evidence and a request to provide advice on any prosecution."  

    Here is a link to my previous post titled Dorothy Hewett Exposed as a Miscreeant

    YES - As Glen Kirchner (a US Federal Prosecutor for 30 years) would say - "Justice Matters."

    Tuesday, June 15, 2021


     Synopsis – The Ozone Café  

    The Ozone Café is about three separate owners of the café and its demise through political corruption.
    ‘I never thought of this place as a ship,’ said Winifred.
    ‘Rennie and I, we had a few drinks the other night when we organised the wall. He told me a few things I didn’t know. When the café was first built, I just said to Rennie I wanted the outside walls curved like a woman. I wanted two stories with a deck on top, and have it rendered smooth as a woman all over. Rennie said he had trouble at first wondering how he would do it, but he eventually found a style, it’s called a P & O Orient. Like the large ships of the thirties. That’s why the building has the top deck and rails. It’s based on the bow of an ocean liner. All this time, I never knew, and he didn’t tell me, he just said, ‘you got the curves you wanted.’

    Middle aged Vincenzo Polamo has migrated to Australia to start a new life. He has left his family back in Calabria, but hopes they will join him when they are ready. He eventually settles in fictional Satara Bay and with the help of his builder brother, builds the Ozone Café in 1957 in an ideal beach location in this popular holiday town. When Vincenzo comes to terms with knowing that his wife Maria will never set foot in Australia, the long hours of making a success of the café with an Australian cuisine, and without familial help, he sells the café, as well as being with Mandy a new woman in his life.
    Unbeknown to Vincenzo, the previous property that was owned by Stan Sawbridge (Stan, the Man) still holds a Demolition Order that his Real Estate Agent Ronny Williams fails to remove during the sale. In the meantime, Vincenzo meets three children, Winifred, Casey and Nicolas Battersby (wheelchair bound) and creates a seascape mural on an outside wall, a dedication to them.
    Joe Pendlebury is the second owner. However, he suffers setbacks with too few customers, poor health and a violent storm that causes wall damage close to the mural. Winifred, who has worked in the café, believes that Pendlebury is dismantling the mural and tells Vincenzo. In suspicious circumstances, Pendlebury uncharacteristically disappears and therfore his wife Shirley sells the café to Con and Dion Lasaridis (Greek boys).
    Con and Dion Lasaridis (Greek boys)
    In this act, Nicolas Battersby dies from muscular dystrophy and this heightens Winifred’s concerns to keep the mural sacred in his memory. While the Ozone is a success, the cracked Ozone wall is a serious problem for the Greek boys who cannot convince the Heytesbury Shire that the side courtyard wall has been professionally rebuilt. They lose the café in a court case when the Shire enforces the unrevoked Demolition Order of 1946. The Greek boys believe it’s due to the undercurrent of political corruption, but cannot afford to fight them in the High Court.
    When the Shire takes its time to demolish the Ozone, Vincenzo, with the help of his brother’s industrial machinery, removes the mural from the café. In broad daylight they act as a bogus demolition team reinstating the brick seascape in Vincenzo’s front yard. Still intact, a fountain wall is built, becoming a lasting memorial to Nicolas Battersby, as well as the sole surviving piece of The Ozone Café.

    The Ozone Café is an exploration of power and control and of those who survive the most powerless of unfair situations. It is a David and Goliath story; the café just as fragile as the people who inhabit it, does not survive while Shire authorities prepare to tear it down. One small glimmer of hope remains - with the reinstatement of the mural as the last surviving piece of the cafe.

    Saturday, November 7, 2020


    One of the events that I am connecting with since having a novel published is Book Clubs. I have recently supplied 8 books to a Cottesloe Book Club and I will be their guest on 24th August. Hopefully, the group will like the novel. I know that a lot of readers do not like the Speculative genre and many book buyers have said to me ‘it’s not something they usually read’, but once they got into the story they liked it. That’s all an author needs. A reader who likes the book. Some interesting comments have been, ‘part love story, part mystery & part thriller.’ ‘quirky, loved the Gothic included, ‘storyline most unusual but grabbed me in.’ ‘I found it very interesting in a subject I was not knowledgeable in’ and mostly (which I love) ‘I couldn’t put it down!’ I am offering a good supply of books to any Perth Book Club at a discount of 20%. My offer of books includes personal delivery, background notes, plus author visit to the meetup group. I can be contacted @ hagemann.helen@gmail.com or SMS to +61404666156 – Please mention “books” in the text. The Last Asbestos Town is published by Adelaide Books, LLC New York, USA – You can buy on Kindle @ amazon.com.au or directly from the publisher!

     

    Thursday, September 3, 2020

    Setting of the Novel. This largely takes place inside a Girl Guide Hall. 

    I drew on several visits to the South West, in particular Collie. The Girl Guide Hall is real, having stayed there, is owned by a friend, and that has since been renovated. Also In 2009, I read a novel by Honey Brown titled Red Queen about a futuristic killer virus, so this author inspired me to speculate a future on asbestos and to write the premise of “what if?”


     

    Saturday, August 29, 2020

    Setting: The photograph to the left is named Coal River in my novel. I used an actual setting of a South West country town and this is a way of writing about what you know. I also had a dream that was so crisp and clear that I thought it would make a good novel. (I wrote the dream into the novel). It was around the time when Prime Minister Tony Abbott had brought in Australia’s Border Force to keep out Asylum Seekers. Mulling over ideas for the novel, I wondered what if fascism (or totalitarianism) took over in our country. How horrible life would be. So I mixed the dream with the idea of an Asbestos Task Force enforcing the removal of all known asbestos.


     

    Wednesday, July 22, 2020

    I'm offering a "FREE" Smashwords ebook to any reader or reviewer! Please note: This novel is not about the medical dangers of asbestos. It does however (on the subliminal level state that this menace should be totally eradicated from our lives. The Last Asbestos Town is a speculative novel on what might happen in a totalitarian society where there is no choice and power to effect programs are total. It is only when the powerless stand up for their rights that shows that my characters who believe differently to the status quo do stand up for their rights.


    I'm offering a free EBook as a giveaway to anyone doing it tough during Covid-19. You can contact me @ hagemann.helen@gmail.com and I will provide a link to Smashwords with a code that will allow you to purchase a Kindle copy, an ePub or an eReader copy at $ 0.00 There are so many people in Melbourne doing it tough and my offer for you during "Lockdown" is I will supply up to 4-5 book links to those individuals. My publishers, Adelaide Books LLC New York, offered the free ebook for family & friends, however I haven't had to use it yet, so I can still supply this link to worthy people. The main thing is you have to open a Smashwords account, so people savvy with opening online accounts it should be easy. Any author wants their book read and I am like thousands who would love to know from readers what they think - good or bad!

    Just a note:  My novel will delight, entertain, intrigue and have you smiling!

    Bounty

    Bounty
    Prose Poetry

    The Five Lives of Ms Bennett

    The Five Lives of Ms Bennett
    A Family Saga

    The Ozone Cafe

    The Ozone Cafe
    White Collar Crime

    The Last Asbestos Town

    The Last Asbestos Town
    Available from Amazon

    Evangelyne

    Evangelyne
    Published by Australian Poetry Centre, Melbourne

    of Arc & Shadow

    of Arc & Shadow
    Published by Sunline Press, WA

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    Perth, Western Australia, Australia
    Helen Hagemann holds an MA in Writing from Edith Cowan University, has three poetry books: Evangelyne & Other Poems published by Australian Poetry, Melbourne (2009) and of Arc & Shadow published by Sunline Press, Perth (2013). Bounty: prose poetry is published by Oz.one Publishing in 2024. She has three novels published The Last Asbestos Town (2020), The Ozone Café (2021) and The Five Lives of Ms Bennett a result of her Masters degree at ECU (2006), is published by Oz.one Publishing (2023).

    Helen Hagemann MBA (Wrtg): ECowan

    Helen Hagemann MBA (Wrtg): ECowan
    Author & Poet

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