Bunty Avieson

Carolyn "Bunty" Avieson is an Australian journalist, feature writer, novelist and academic. She has a PhD (MQ), a Master of Philosophy (MQ) and an Associate Diploma of Journalism (RMIT). In 2008–2009 she worked as a media consultant to newspaper Bhutan Observer, partly funded by the United Nations Development Program and was a consultant to Journalists Without Borders, Asia Pacific Desk. She has published three novels, a novella and travel memoir; and been translated into Japanese, German and Thai. She is the recipient of two Ned Kelly Awards. In the 1990s she was editorial director of mass market women's magazines, Woman's Day and New Idea.

Awards

  • 2002 – Ned Kelly Awards – winner of the Best First Novel and Reader's Vote, for Apartment 255[1]
  • 2003 – shortlisted for Ned Kelly Crime Writing Awards – Best Novel for The Affair
  • 2004 – shortlisted for Ned Kelly Crime Writing Awards – Best Novel for The Wrong Door
  • 2011 – Dean's HDR Award
  • 2013 – Vice Chancellor's Commendation for PhD thesis

Bibliography

Novels

Travel writing

  • Baby in a Backpack Through Bhutan (2004) Review
  • The Dragon Finds Its Voice (2013)

Documentary writing

  • A Story from Bhutan: The Making of "Travellers & Magicians" (2004)[2]

Personal life

Avieson's partner is the film producer Mal Watson,[3] who made The Cup and Travellers & Magicians, with writer/director Khyentse Norbu. Avieson and Watson have a daughter, Kathryn, who was the baby in the travel book Baby in a Backpack to Bhutan. They live in Sydney. Avieson's father was the late Associate Professor John Avieson, one of Australia's first journalism academics, who authored several books, including Applied Journalism in Australia and Editing Australian Newspapers.

References

  1. "Ned Kelly Awards". Australian Crime Fiction Database. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  2. "Filmography". IMDb. Retrieved 14 September 2007.
  3. "Biography". Bunty Avieson. Archived from the original on 10 August 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-14.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.