How to Make a Bird

How to Make a Bird

by Martine Murray (Author)

Synopsis

WINNER: 2002 QLD Premier's Literary Awards.I'm not a bad person. I've simply come out of left field. I'm a stray and, anyway, whatever I am, I'm not it yet. I'm still becoming. In fact, I'd always believed that I was once a horse, because I loved to run down a hill. And Eddie was a fish. He was a swaggerer, if you know what I mean. Flimsy but loveable.Mannie is searching for the thing she doesn't yet know, but it's like a runaway kite pulling her heart forward. So she's leaving home. She's heading for the city with nothing but a long red dress, a strong hunch, and an unknown address in her pocket. As the day turns to night, Mannie makes a lot of discoveries and not exactly the ones she planned to make.With rare sensitivity, wisdom and humour, and a voice that's entirely her own, Martine Murray tells a bittersweet story about longing and losing and finding again.

$11.85

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Published: 01 Aug 2003

ISBN 10: 1741141095
ISBN 13: 9781741141092
Book Overview: Commended: Kraft Foods Prize for Young Adult Fiction, Victorian Premier's Literary Awards 2002.

Media Reviews
Readers will love this dynamic survivor's tale of a search for what is important in life.' Australian Bookseller & PublisherShe's done it again.' Ernie Tucker, English in AustraliaThe seductive language evokes the emotional and physical landscapes in a coming of age tale that is beautifully told' Readings MonthlyAug 03Her characters leap off the page one of the most original, irrepressible and exciting voices' to be heard amongst writers at present.' ViewpointVol 11 No. 4 Summer 2003.
Author Bio
Martine Murray is a young author/illustrator. Born in Melbourne, she has travelled widely and now lives in Elwood. She says she has been a student for much longer than one should be, studying painting at the Victorian College of the Arts, filmmaking, dance and dance therapy, and writing. She teaches yoga and circus skills, makes dance theatre and writes stories. She likes dancing, walking and hanging upside-down on things.Martine is the author and illustrator of A Moose Called Mouse and The Slightly True Story of Cedar B. Hartley (Allen + Unwin) and author of A Dog Called Bear (Random House).