Loreen Brehaut (International) assertion Loreen Brehaut i(A15683 works by) (a.k.a. Loreen A. Brehaut)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Mother Don't Cry Ryszard Wiland , Loreen Brehaut , Kew East : Australian Booksellers Association , 2007 Z1565275 2007 single work autobiography
1 6 y separately published work icon Under a Bilari Tree I Born Alice Bilari Smith , Anna Vitenbergs (editor), Loreen Brehaut (editor), Fremantle : Fremantle Press , 2002 Z1001610 2002 single work autobiography

'Alice Bilari Smith has lived in the Pilbara all her life, on stations and in the bush, on government reserves and in towns. As a girl on Rocklea Station she narrowly avoided removal from her family by 'the welfare'. Instead Alice learned to cook and launder, sew and clean, shoe horses, chop wood and milk cows. Her working life on stations continued as a young married woman and she added mustering, dingo scalping, shearers' assistant and sheepyard building to her skills. Alice Bilari Smith also grew up in the ways of the country, hunting, cooking and building in the traditional manner. By the time she had five children of her own she was playing an active role in caring for other Aboriginal children and she initiated the establishment of a Homemakers Centre in Roebourne.' (Source: TROVE)

1 y separately published work icon The Guruma Story Guruma-yharntu wangka Peter Stevens , Loreen Brehaut (editor), Anna Vitenbergs (editor), Alice Springs : IAD Press , 2001 Z1587258 2001 anthology prose
'The harsh, beautiful landscape of Western Australia's Pilbara region has been home to the Guruma people for thousands of years. In this book the Guruma elders share stories of the land and the way they have lived there, revealing the richness and ingenuity of daily life in an uncompromising landscape. Traditional ways and customs, Dreamtime stories and religious beliefs are described here, alongside photographs that bring country to life and show the importance of cultural sites. These stories were collected for the benefit of Guruma children yet to be born. They tell of the strength and vitality of Guruma culture and the fundamental signficance of the traditional relationship with the land in a way that will enrich the understanding of readers everywhere. Source: http://catdir.loc.gov/ (Sighted 25/03/10)
1 5 y separately published work icon Miles of Post and Wire Florence Corrigan , Loreen Brehaut , Broome : Magabala Books , 1998 Z266830 1998 single work life story Fencer, horsewoman, dogger, roo skinner, goat hunter, cook, hard-working mother and backbone of two generations in the high hill country of the Pilbara. Florence Corrigan's life starts taking shape in an extremely isolated childhood and transforms when she escapes from the bush. The education about society continues on her travels around Australia and culminates when she meets her future husband over a lost bet in a strange beer garden. Florence's life is a vigorous journey of discovery of people, places and self. This is compounded by single motherhood, forced adoption in the sixties - when society thought it knew better - and self-taught literacy. Miles of Post and Wire details Florence's search for truth and amidst the deception shaped by her parents and silenced by family and death. It also unearths shocking family secrets that ultimately lead Florence on a pilgrimage for identity, a name and a culture. - back cover
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