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Nicholas Hasluck Nicholas Hasluck i(A32097 works by)
Born: Established: 1942 Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 Light that Time has Made Nicholas Hasluck , single work prose
1 y separately published work icon Cotswolds Saga Nicholas Hasluck , Claremont : Freshwater Bay Press , 2024 29191642 2024 single work autobiography 'While at Oxford in the 1960s the author took a trip to Crimscote near Stratford-upon-Avon, which led eventually to marriage and other journeys. Now he gives a fine account of family life and local ways in this corner of England, recalling trips to hill forts, feudal castles, manor houses, village fêtes, days on old canals and country walks, nights at Shakespearean dramas and Robert Dover's Cotswold Games. His lively saga spans several generations.' 

 (Publication summary)

1 Vale William Grono (1934-2022) Nicholas Hasluck , 2023 single work obituary (for William Grono )
— Appears in: Editor's Desk - 2022 2023;
1 y separately published work icon Fact and Fiction Nicholas Hasluck , Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2023 27218038 2023 single work autobiography

'What are said to be the facts of a matter can be affected by pieces of fiction, as in testimony flawed by an imperfect memory or tales prompted by self-interest.

'Alert to the ins and outs of the trial process, Nicholas Hasluck, a former judge and accomplished novelist, has drawn upon his personal diaries to explore the relationship between law and literature, as he did in his earlier work about judicial life, Bench and Book.

'Judging isn’t just about finding facts and applying law. It involves getting to grips with individual stories and dilemmas. A mind alert to the complexities of human nature won’t accept too easily what is simply alleged or said to be true. At its best, law is truth in action, a story showing what actually happened and what should be done.' (Publication summary)

1 Hair Dye Moments Nicholas Hasluck , 2023 single work review
— Appears in: Quadrant , April vol. 67 no. 4 2023; (p. 84-86)

— Review of Find Me My Enemies [and] Cover Story Michael Wilding , 2022 selected work novel
1 1 y separately published work icon Che's Last Embrace Nicholas Hasluck , Melbourne : Arcadia , 2022 25779347 2022 single work novel

'A contemporary artist is out to win a portrait prize by sketching a Che Guevara rebel from the old Australian colony in Paraguay. The artist’s brother is troubled by doubts about the rebel’s heroic identity and feels obliged to investigate.

'Set largely in South America, the novel explores divergent approaches to the truth in the wilds of Bolivia where Che sought to ignite a widespread revolution. The investigation ends in Sydney where Che’s ambitious dreams are still revered and the prize will soon be awarded. The counter-factual mysteries to be unravelled mirror South America’s own ingenious literary form, magic realism, a form reflecting the post-modern world’s richly-imagined but often bizarre perceptions.' (Publication summary)

1 2 y separately published work icon Bench and Book Nicholas Hasluck , North Melbourne : Arcadia , 2021 22948297 2021 single work autobiography

'In both law and literature, Nicholas Hasluck has been a player and a commentator. In this fascinating memoir he uses diaries of his time as a Judge and as Chair of the Literature Board to explore intriguing issues at the start of the new century, from culture wars in Australia to al-Qaeda’s terrorist attack in New York.

'He turns an astute gaze on battles in the courts and everyday struggles and delusions. He watches self-styled intellectual leaders nail their colours to the mast with an air of heroic virtue, though nearly everyone in the room agrees with them.

'In times when history is often misinterpreted, how can we pass on what has been learnt? How can Australians come together to build a better future, rather than denigrating our institutions and shared past? His views are those of a writer with a principled mind and a ready sense of humour.'

Source : publisher's blurb

1 y separately published work icon Rollo’s Way Nicholas Hasluck , Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2020 19511274 2020 single work biography

'A lively memoir in which Nicholas Hasluck explores the life and times of his elder brother Rollo, an adventurer brimful of bright ideas and his own way of going at things. Rollo's family moved from Perth to Canberra in the war years. His father's work on post-war security led to further service in New York and a return to Perth in the late 1940s. Friendships forged in schooldays set the scene for Rollo's convivial but precarious way of life in the 1960s. The story covers Rollo's marriage, his involvement in local theatre, escapades on Rottnest Island, management of a night club, the making of deals in real estate during the nickel boom and some final travels. Rollo's style is mirrored in a line marking the sudden end of his story: He won laughter and the love of friends.' (Publication summary)

1 Grandson i "The faint where are you voice", Nicholas Hasluck , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Quadrant , May vol. 63 no. 5 2019; (p. 9)
1 Barque i "An ill-fated barque", Nicholas Hasluck , 2019 single work poetry
— Appears in: Quadrant , May vol. 63 no. 5 2019; (p. 9)
1 1 y separately published work icon Beyond the Equator : An Australian Memoir Nicholas Hasluck , Melbourne : Arcadia , 2019 18425102 2019 single work autobiography

'‘I see traces in my past that point to what the world has now become.’

'Like many young Australians in the 1960s Nick Hasluck set sail for London, in his case for a post-graduate law degree, but looking also for new horizons and ways to be a writer. From a seedy room at the International Language Club he explored the ‘Kangaroo Valley’ party scene around Earl’s Court – until he met a girl from the Cotswolds who was to change his life, a romance leading to misadventures in Europe and eventually to a job in Fleet Street.

'Britain was opening up to him in unexpected ways. He recalls combative speakers at the Oxford Union – Malcolm X, James Baldwin, Tariq Ali – and luminaries in other places such as Menzies, Profumo, Field Marshal Slim and the controversial jurists, Hailsham and Denning. Along the way, Hasluck writes skilfully of becoming a lawyer, then a Judge, and also a well-known novelist.

'In this eloquent memoir the mind of the lawyer is constantly enriched by the style of the writer. To a lively storyteller the world beyond the equator is still the miracle it always was.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 y separately published work icon Jigsaw : Patterns in Law and Literature Nicholas Hasluck , Melbourne : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2018 14159320 2018 selected work essay

'Judicial appointments, the rule of law, activism on the High Court, the push for indigenous recognition, the role of style in writing judgments, legal images in fiction’s cave of shadows – novelist and former judge Nicholas Hasluck covers these and other issues in this intriguing collection of occasional pieces. There are glimpses along the way of some remarkable personalities: Gough Whitlam, John Howard, Lord Denning, radical judge A.B. Piddington, well-known writers such as Gore Vidal, Germaine Greer, Clive James, Christopher Brennan, the Durack sisters, and activist Don McLeod, who led the historic Aboriginal workers strike.

'The links between legal argument and literary works and the way in which they can enhance the teaching and practice of law is reflected in the book’s title – Jigsaw: Patterns in Law and Literature.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 2 y separately published work icon The Bradshaw Case Nicholas Hasluck , North Melbourne : Arcadia , 2016 10081972 2016 single work novel

'A compelling drama … a verdict just in time.'

'A newcomer to Broome, Colin Everett is drawn into a fierce dispute about native title known as ‘the Bradshaw case’. The disappearance of a key witness points to threats of blackmail, or even worse.'

'To win the case for the Aboriginal claimants, Colin and his fellow lawyers have to find the witness, get the better of their opponents, and probe the origin of ancient rock art in the Kimberley region.'

'The case ends in a swirl of controversy and a crucial verdict. It offers a poignant glimpse of how the future can be shaped by half-truths and human failings, by contested versions of the past. ...'

1 Deaths Foretold Nicholas Hasluck , 2014 single work short story
— Appears in: Westerly , November vol. 59 no. 2 2014; (p. 91-100)
1 Geoffrey Lehmann’s Journey From Robert Hughes to Ross and Others Nicholas Hasluck , 2014 single work essay
— Appears in: Quadrant , November vol. 58 no. 11 2014; (p. 72-75)
'The dates mentioned in Geoffrey Lehmann's new book remind us that in the early postwar period Australian literature was enriched by the work of widely respected poets such as Judith Wright, A.D. Hope, James McAuley, David Campbell, Rosemary Dobson and Gwen Harwood. Then, towards the end of the 1950s, a younger and equally talented generation began to make its presence felt.' (Publication abstract)
1 1 y separately published work icon Rooms in the City Nicholas Hasluck , Kew : Australian Scholarly Publishing , 2014 7728958 2014 single work novel crime historical fiction

'Athens, November 1915. A city buffeted by the chaos of the war, a city swarming with spies and opportunists. When a British counter espionage unit is contacted by a man from Smyrna, it seems that a bold new plan is afoot to cut through the Turkish defences at nearby Gallipoli … until the finding of the man’s body in a room set aside for the meeting.

'Australian-born agent Robert Kaub is drawn into the investigation, and soon forced to confront memories of love and betrayal in pre-war Athens. An ominous note, an old coin from Ephesus, cryptic cables – Robert’s discoveries bring him eventually to a place where things could go either way for the Allied cause.


'Aegean battlefields. A besieged city. Deaths foretold. These are mirrored in a mystery shaped by the ill-fated attempt to capture Constantinople, a story tinted by the truths and untruths of war, a tragic tale akin to myth. ' (Publication summary)

1 The Kimberley Dreaming of the Durack Sisters Nicholas Hasluck , 2012 single work criticism
— Appears in: Quadrant , October vol. 56 no. 10 2012; (p. 33-36)
1 How to Write a Political Novel Nicholas Hasluck , 2011 single work criticism
— Appears in: Quadrant , December vol. 55 no. 12 2011; (p. 26-31)
Nicholas Hasluck draws on his own experiences to comment on the standing of political novels in Australia.
1 6 y separately published work icon Dismissal Nicholas Hasluck , Pymble : Fourth Estate , 2011 Z1790743 2011 single work novel 'When Roy Temple and his friends are accused of espionage in the Cold War era, a cloud of suspicion will linger over them for years, although they are never charged with any crime. Twenty years later, Roy is a leading barrister and key adviser to the federal government, with a bold plan to resolve Australia′s political crisis. But the old allegations cast long shadows, and even those he wishes to help doubt his motivation - does he want to save the government, or save himself?' (Trove record)
1 An Old Coin i "when this you see", Nicholas Hasluck , 2008 single work poetry
— Appears in: Lines in the Sand : New Writing from Western Australia 2008; (p. 53)
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