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When the Great War ends, Joshua Connor, a grieving farmer and sometime water diviner from the Mallee in Victoria, sets out to fulfil his wife's dying wish - to travel to Gallipoli to recover the bodies of his three sons and bury them in consecrated ground. Crescent collides with cross, and hope with reason as he discovers that his eldest son, Art, may still be alive. When Connor makes a desperate dash into the perilous heart of Anatolia one question haunts him: if Art is alive, why hasn't he come home? This is not a war novel, not even an anti-war novel. Instead it focuses on the battles that go on inside the hearts and minds of a small group of Australians and Turks as they struggle to bury their dead and rebuild their lives after the First World War. The story is based on first-hand resources, diaries and official records.
When the Great War ends, Joshua Connor, a grieving farmer and sometime water diviner from the Mallee in Victoria, sets out to fulfil his wife's dying wish - to travel to Gallipoli to recover the bodies of his three sons and bury them in consecrated ground. Crescent collides with cross, and hope with reason as he discovers that his eldest son, Art, may still be alive. When Connor makes a desperate dash into the perilous heart of Anatolia one question haunts him: if Art is alive, why hasn't he come home? This is not a war novel, not even an anti-war novel. Instead it focuses on the battles that go on inside the hearts and minds of a small group of Australians and Turks as they struggle to bury their dead and rebuild their lives after the First World War. The story is based on first-hand resources, diaries and official records.
Now a major motion picture directed by and starring Russell Crowe.
Andrew’s working life began in archaeology. Armed with a Masters in
History and Archaeology from the University of Melbourne and a
trowel from the local hardware store, he worked extensively on
excavations throughout the Middle East and Turkey. Having failed to
locate the Ark of the Covenant, and on the brink of starvation
because of the lousy pay, it was time for Andrew to find a proper
job. Instead he began working as a freelance writer. He had a
weekly interview-based column in The Age newspaper, Australia’s
premium daily broadsheet, and was a regular contributor to Vogue
Living.
After completing two books, he turned his attention to advertising,
lured by the brevity. He completed Award School – an industry run
ad course – and is guilty of developing product names, positioning
statements, press campaigns, TV and radio ads and marketing
material for clients as diverse as Australian Taxation Office,
Tourism Victoria, Fosters Group, Honda, Ford, ANZ, Thirsty Camel,
State Trustees, VicRoads, Cancer Council, Brookfield Multiplex and
Tasmanian Salmon.
In Andrew’s latest career iteration he has a Diploma in TV and
Video Production and works as a scriptwriter and researcher for
film and television. More recently he has been Script Editor and
Script-coordinator across the series of Jack Irish telemovies,
starring Guy Pearce. Andrew is currently Co-producer on the third
of these, Dead Point, and co-writing the fourth, White Dog. He is
the Associate Producer on the recent adaptation of Peter Temple’s
Broken Shore.
Andrew has recently co-written the feature film The Water Diviner
with Andrew Knight and they are about to begin work on writing
another feature that remains a mystery (even to them). Meaghan has
written and researched several series for Australian television,
including the Logie-nominated series, The Pacific in the Wake of
Captain Cook with Sam Neill, Shane Delia’s Spice Journey: Turkey
and Gourmet Farmer Afloat and also works as a researcher on other
major film and television productions including The Sydney Mardi
Gras Parade, Adam Liaw’s Destination Flavour: China, The Water
Diviner, Australia: The Story of Us and Doctor Doctor. She also
writes regularly for The Guardian, The Age, Sydney Morning Herald
and The Saturday Paper on art and culture, and is the Australia/NZ
correspondent for the UK-based publication, Research Professional
News.
Meaghan’s first novel was an adaptation of the script for Russell
Crowe’s feature, The Water Diviner, which was published by Pan
Macmillan and sold over 45,000 copies in Australia and
internationally. She is represented by Curtis Brown Australia, and
in 2018, her novel The Honourable Thief, was published by Pan
Macmillan, with the sequel, The Emerald Tablet, published in 2019.
In 2018, Harper Collins also published Meaghan’s book, The Pacific:
In the Footsteps of Captain Cook with Sam Neill.
Meaghan lives in inner-city Melbourne with her screenwriter
husband, their two children, a dog, a geriatric chicken named
‘Black Ops’ and two cats. Jack Thompson, AM (born 31 August 1940)
is an Australian actor and one of the major figures of Australian
cinema. He was educated at University of Queensland, before
embarking on his acting career. In 2002, he was made an honorary
member of the Australian Cinematographers Society (ACS). He is best
known as a lead actor in several acclaimed Australian films
including such classics as Sunday Too Far Away (1975), The Man from
Snowy River (1982) and Breaker Morant (1980). He won Cannes and AFI
acting awards for the latter film. He was the recipient of a Living
Legend Award at the 2005 Inside Film Awards.
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