Jenny Ackland Jenny Ackland i(7029270 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Jenny Ackland is a Melbourne-based teacher and writer.

Most Referenced Works

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Little Gods Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2018 12580113 2018 single work novel

'In the Mallee, wide flat scrubland in north-western Victoria, men are bred quiet, women stoic and the gothic is never far away. Olive Lovelock has just turned twelve. Olive is smart, fanciful and brave and on the cusp of something darker than the small world she has known her entire life. She knows that adults aren't very good at keeping secrets and makes it her mission to uncover as many as she can. When she learns that she once had a baby sister who died—a child unacknowledged by her family— she becomes convinced it was murder. Her obsession with the mystery and relentless quest to find out what happened have seismic repercussions. It is Olive herself who has the most to lose as the secrets she unearths multiply and take on complicated lives of their own.

'Little Gods is a novel about the mess of family, about vengeance and innocence lost. It explores resilience and girlhood, and questions how families live with their complexities and contradictions. Resonating with echoes of Australian classics like Seven Little Australians, Cloudstreet and Jasper Jones, Little Gods is told with similar idiosyncrasy, insight and style. Funny and heart-breaking, this is a rare and original novel about a remarkable girl who learns the hard way that the truth doesn't always set you free.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

2019 shortlisted The Stella Prize
y separately published work icon The Secret Son Hornsby : Allen and Unwin , 2015 8852737 2015 single work novel

'I know that two men are coming up the mountain, at this moment, including the boy from far away. I wonder what my grandson's face will look like.This is a boy in the skin of a man.I know the boy is innocent, that it's his family soul which is guilty.

'An old woman sits waiting in a village that clings to a Turkish mountainside, where the women weave rugs, make tea and keep blood secrets that span generations. Berna can see what others cannot, so her secrets are deeper and darker than most. It is time for her to tell her story, even though the man for whom her words are meant won't hear them. It is time for the truth to be told.

Nearly a hundred years before, her father James had come to the village on the back of a donkey, gravely ill, rescued from the abandoned trenches of Gallipoli by a Turkish boy whose life he had earlier spared. James made his life there, never returning to Australia and never realising that his own father was indeed the near-mythical bushranger that the gossips had hinted at when he'd been a boy growing up in Beechworth.

'Now, as Berna waits, a young man from Melbourne approaches to visit his parents' village, against the vehement opposition of his cursed, tight-lipped grandfather. What is the astonishing story behind the dark deeds that connect the two men, unknown to each other and living almost a century apart?'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

2015 commended The Fellowship of Australian Writers Victoria Inc. National Literary Awards FAW Christina Stead Award
Last amended 19 Jul 2017 16:14:45
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