Rosie Waterland Rosie Waterland i(8704206 works by)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 The Slutty Whore from Whoresvill Making Us All Look Bad Rosie Waterland , 2019 single work prose
— Appears in: Choice Words : A Collection of Writing about Abortion 2019;
1 2 y separately published work icon Every Lie I've Ever Told Rosie Waterland , Sydney : HarperCollins Australia , 2017 11500537 2017 single work autobiography

'The bestselling author of The Anti-Cool Girl returns with a devastating, heartbreaking, brilliant, brave and laugh-out-loud funny memoir of truth, lies and everything that lies between... 
'I had made it! All my dreams had come true. I had an operating fridge, I was doing brilliantly, and I had written the memoir to prove it. I even had online haters. I had conquered life at 30 and nothing was ever going to go wrong again! 
'Then I downed a litre of vodka followed by 45 pills. What a fraud.' 
'It was all going so well for Rosie Waterland. Until it wasn't. 
'Until, shockingly, something awful happened and Rosie went into agonising free fall. 
'Until late one evening she found herself in a hospital emergency bed, trembling and hooked to a drip. Over the course of that long, painful night, she kept thinking about how ironic it was, that right in the middle of writing a book about lies, she'd ended up telling the most significant lie of all. 
'A raw, beautiful, sad, shocking - and very, very funny - memoir of all the lies we tell others and the lies we tell ourselves. ' (Publication summary)
 

1 You Will Be a Houso Kid Rosie Waterland , 2016 single work prose
— Appears in: Best Austrian Australian Comedy Writing 2016; (p. 13-22)
1 Thirty Seconds Rosie Waterland , 2015 single work essay
— Appears in: Mothers & Others : Australian Writers on Why Not All Women Are Mothers and Not All Mothers Are the Same 2015; (p. 95-102)
1 4 y separately published work icon The Anti Cool Girl Rosie Waterland , Sydney : HarperCollins Australia , 2015 8704229 2015 single work autobiography

'A dark, funny and subversive memoir about surviving the very worst that life can throw at you, Rosie Waterland's story of her coming of age is a blackly comic Australian memoir for our times and a clarion call for all anti-cool girls everywhere.

'Rosie Waterland is the survivor of one of the most appalling childhoods since Augusten Burroughs. There were rehab stays and AA meetings. There were overdoses, dramas, suicide attempts. There were narrow escapes from drug dealers, not to mention a numerous round of dodgy men in and out of her mother's life. They endlessly moved houses, countries, schools, squats. There was neglect, endless DOCS workers and the occasional abusive foster parent. Rosie and her sisters became Mormon, Catholic, Wiccan, Christian. There was a second marriage and divorce. Rosie watched as her dad passed out/was arrested/vomited/cried. There were frustrated family members with no time for kids. Rosie had to talk her mum out of killing herself and watched as her dad's coffin was lowered into the ground.

'But Rosie is far more than the sum of her parts.

'The quality that lies at the heart of Rosie's appeal is her straight-up, unaffected directness - her ability to say what she really thinks, to call it as she sees it. She's kind of an Everygirl. the Anti-Cool Girl that we all want to be. She's funny, honest and inspirational. She is our Caitlin Moran, our very own Lena Dunham, and she will tell a uniquely Australian story, in only the way that a straight-talking Australian girl can say it.' (Publication summary)

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