Samantha Fry Samantha Fry i(10820451 works by)
Gender: Female
Heritage: Aboriginal Wageman / Wagiman ; Aboriginal
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BiographyHistory

Samantha Fry is an artist and illustrator who lives in Darwin, Northern Territory. She is descended from the Dagiman people of Katherine and lived in remote communities across the Northern Territory.

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2016 recipient Australian Indigenous Creator Scholarship for a mentorship to learn the craft of illustration and will illustrate her first children’s picture book.

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Aunty's Wedding Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2020 19670947 2020 single work picture book children's

'A Tiwi-Island girl prepares for Aunty's wedding with help from her maningawu in this vibrant picture book by the popular actor and writers of Top End Wedding and the highly acclaimed illustrator of Alfred's War.

'Everyone on the island is getting ready for Aunty's wedding.

'Maningawu puts on her best hat and I can wear a wurrijinga in my hair. Lucky!

'We all dress up, but I still don't understand. Why do people have a wedding?

'A warm family story that celebrates love and culture from actor, activist, writer and Australian sweetheart, Miranda Tapsell, and Joshua Tyler, co-writer of Top End Wedding, lushly illustrated by Samantha Fry.'  (Publication summary)

2021 longlisted Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) Children's Picture Book of the Year
y separately published work icon Brother Moon Broome : Magabala Books , 2020 18588234 2020 single work picture book children's

'Great-Grandpa Liman lives in a small house by the sea. There are no lights - just stars as far as the eye can see.

'Brother Moon is a powerful story lovingly told by a great-grandfather to his great-grandson. Beneath the dark sky of the Northern Territory, Hippy-Boy is captivated when Great-Grandpa Liman tells him the mysterious story of his brother and how it guides his connection to Country.

'Great-Grandpa is a masterful storyteller and, as the tale unfolds, he finally reveals his brother is the moon - a wonder of the universe. Hippy-Boy learns how his greatgrandfather uses the phases of the moon when he goes hunting and fishing, and why it is important for us all to have an understanding of the natural world.

'Liman (Harry Morgan), the author's grandfather, was a respected Wadjigany man - a leader amongst his people and the community. Liman was born at Manjimamany in the Northern Territory in 1916. He was a canoe maker, hunter, community mediator, and a family man who lived off the land and travelled the seas. Liman spoke Batjamalh, his first language, and other languages from the Daly River area.' (Publication summary)

2021 shortlisted The Wilderness Society Environment Award for Children's Literature Picture Fiction
y separately published work icon Alfred's War Broome : Magabala Books , 2018 12049951 2018 single work single work picture book children's Indigenous story

'Alfred’s War is a powerful story that unmasks the lack of recognition given to Australian Indigenous servicemen who returned from the WWI battlelines. Alfred was just a young man when he was injured and shipped home from France. Neither honoured as a returned soldier or offered government support afforded to non-Indigenous servicemen, Alfred took up a solitary life walking the back roads – billy tied to his swag, finding work where he could.

'Alfred was a forgotten soldier. Although he had fought bravely in the Great War, as an Aboriginal man he wasn’t classed as a citizen of his own country. Yet Alfred always remembered his friends in the trenches and the mateship they had shared. Sometimes he could still hear the never-ending gunfire in his head and the whispers of diggers praying. Every year on ANZAC Day, Alfred walked to the nearest town, where he would quietly stand behind the people gathered and pay homage to his fallen mates.

'Rachel Bin Salleh’s poignant narrative opens our hearts to the sacrifice and contribution that Indigenous people have made to Australia’s war efforts, the true extent of which is only now being revealed.' (Publication summary)

2020 shortlisted New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards Indigenous Writer's Prize
2019 longlisted Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) Small Publishers' Children's Book of the Year
2018 shortlisted Speech Pathology Australia Book of the Year Awards Eight to 10 Years
Last amended 8 Oct 2024 09:53:43
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