Caroline Van de Pol Caroline Van de Pol i(11538321 works by)
Born: Established: Broadmeadows, Broadmeadows - Craigieburn area, Melbourne - North, Melbourne, Victoria, ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Caroline Van de Pol Reviews Seabirds Crying in the Harbour Dark by Catherine Cole Caroline Van de Pol , 2017 single work essay
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 21 2017;

'‘The Brain – is wider than the Sky -,’ wrote Emily Dickinson revealing our capacity to expand our mind beyond experience to imagination. Acclaimed American novelist and essayist Marilynne Robinson recently recapped this magical opening of the mind that comes with reading when she wrote an article describing what it’s like for an author trying to find the right word. I was reminded of this image again when delving into a new collection of short stories from Australian writer and academic Catherine Cole. In diverse and joyful ways Robinson and Cole remind me of what I love about reading (and writing), of what I learn from books through that open invitation to go beyond a closed door, to find my way around the darkness and relish the light that shines through even the saddest of stories.' (Introduction)

1 1 y separately published work icon Back to Broady : A Memoir of Growing Up in Broadmeadows Caroline Van de Pol , Edgecliff : Ventura Press , 2017 11538343 2017 single work autobiography

'Life in McIvor Street, Broadmeadows was unpredictable. Cally Egan grew up expecting and experiencing the best and worst of her 1960s Australian working-class community. So chaotic were the days and nights in her big Irish Catholic family that she often planned her escape. Perched on the cold terracotta roof of her Housing Commission home and smoking a crushed cigarette from the bottom of her mother’s handbag, she would peer into the windows of the low-flying planes making their way to Melbourne’s new Tullamarine Airport, and hear her father’s voice and dream. ‘I’ll take you on one to Ireland one day’, he promised her, often as a reward for helping when her mother was so unwell that she took to her bed, or disappeared to hospital for shock treatment. Back to Broady tells the compelling story of a young girl’s fight through disadvantage, and the lifelong friendships that have helped her walk the fine line between survival and surrender. Incredibly moving and painfully honest, this exceptional memoir paints a hilarious yet often harrowing portrait of one family, and their determination to survive.' (Publication Summary)

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