Don Aitkin Don Aitkin i(A32253 works by) (a.k.a. Donald Alexander Aitkin)
Born: Established: 1937 Sydney, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon The Innings Biography Don Aitkin , Yarralumla : Danbee Books , 2018 15436822 2018 single work novel thriller

'Nick Carrington, New York television scriptwriter, is back in Australia to see his parents. An old friend, millionaire Ben Mitchell, begs him to read the manuscript of a biography of his grandfather, whose author has just had a heart attack, and is on life support. The job will require a weekend, and Nick has only two weeks back home. Equally nettled and intrigued, Nick finally agrees, and discovers he is being taken by helicopter to a grand old mansion on the Hawkesbury River, west of Sydney. He meets the female staff, Kate the housekeeper and Laura the research assistant. The house is wonderful, yet oddly disturbing. There is no ghost, but an air of apprehension hovers over the group. The biography covers the life and work of Sir Arthur Innings, a most successful immigrant. He seems to have done almost everything right, and the biography makes that plain, as Nick reads on. It's almost too good to be true, yet Laura says they could not find any great sins, or even any villains. Yet before the weekend is over Nick finds himself in a plot that is even more complicated and tense than anything he has ever written for television.'   (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon Moving on, a Tale of the Millennium Don Aitkin , Yarralumla : Danbee Books , 2016 9723716 2016 single work novel
1 y separately published work icon Nobody's Hero Don Aitkin , Yarralumla : Danbee Books , 2016 9199236 2016 single work novel

'In this third novel in the Hogarth Trilogy, the war in Vietnam moves closer to Australia, conscripts are sent to Vietnam, and the community begins to divide. Helen Hogarth, increasingly passionate about the wrongness of Australia's involvement, becomes a protester, which complicates the life of her husband, who is not only an increasingly important playerwithin the University but also the designer of a change in structure to a munitions factory, sure to be the target of protests and strike action.Within the university too there is growing division, and Hogarth becomes involved in the journey of a disgruntled academic staff member, who begins to paint slogans on University property.It begins to be clear that the staff member'sprotest is directed at the Vice-Chancellor. Is itbecause he was refused promotion in the last round, or is it because he is one of the leaders in the anti-Vietnam action demonstration.Helen Hogarth wins a court battle as a solicitor,joins the ALP and is suddenly the endorsed candidate for an unwinnable seat. Hogarth's worries intensify, but he discovers what has been the source of the staff member's unhappiness, and in doing so learns what the Vice-Chancellor did during the war, which illuminates the last days of that conflict.Helen Hogarth's quest for a seat, though this contest is only a first shot, makes Hogarth realise that wis wife has great talents, and he becomes aware that her career is more important than his own. She does not win, but they agree it is a new start.' (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon The Canonbury Tales Don Aitkin , Yarralumla : Danbee Books , 2015 9027478 2015 single work novel

'A group of accountants and finance people at a resort find they are marooned overnight by a flash flood. With only dim light available and led by the most senior person there, a woman, they talk, not about money or the stock market, but about the most important romantic encounter they had, and its effect upon them. Hesitant at first, some begin to see how important the evening is. Some of the stories are sad, some joyful; some loves are lost, some are in the distant past, some are happily still there. The long evening is cathartic, with old ghosts brought up and banished forever. In the morning, when they are rescued, all they will say is ‘We talked a bit’. But that talk has changed their lives.' (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon Turning Point Don Aitkin , Yarralumla : Don Aitkin , 2015 8762887 2015 single work novel

'The second novel in The Hogarth Trilogy, in which Hogarth becomes a Dean in his university, learns of an extraordinary story from the war that involves his father, is appointed to assist a Select Committee in Canberra, where he meets an attractive woman, and becomes aware of the intrigue and machinations that mark Australia's becoming involved in the war in Vietnam. The competing demands of politics, principle marriage and attraction mark this most readable novel.' (Publication summary)

1 Why Do I Read Quadrant? Don Aitkin , 2007 single work essay
— Appears in: AQ : Australian Quarterly , January-February vol. 79 no. 1 2007; (p. 9-16)
1 Independent Duo Don Aitkin , 2003 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , June-July no. 252 2003; (p. 17-18)

— Review of The Andren Report : An Independent Way in Australian Politics Peter Andren , 2003 single work autobiography ; A Humble Backbencher : The Memoirs of Kenneth Lionel Fry : MHR Fraser ACT, 1974-84 Ken Fry , 2002 single work autobiography
1 Finding a New Legend Don Aitkin , 1997 single work biography
— Appears in: Quadrant , November vol. 41 no. 11 1997; (p. 34-39)
1 3 y separately published work icon The Second Chair Don Aitkin , Sydney : Angus and Robertson , 1977 Z331258 1977 single work novel

'It is 1963, and everything seems fine for the beginning of the academic year in Sydney’s new university. But the sudden death of Professor Bill Gilbey sets in train a political intrigue with disturbing implications

'For the suddenly elevated Head of Sociology, Richard Hogarth, Gilbey’s now vacant chair has to be filled, but individuals in and outside the campus have other ideas. The medicos see an opportunity to move the chair to Medicine, and Hogarth finds that what seemed straightforward is actually quite complicated. And in time the security service becomes involved as suspicions of communist infiltration arise.

'And behind the public posturings the private problems of the participants emerge to influence and confuse the sequence of events. This novel of campus intrigue was originally published in 1977 by Angus and Robertson, and was compared favourably to the work of C. P Snow in England. You can read some more about the background to the novel here.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon The Hogarth Trilogy Don Aitkin , 1977 Yarralumla : Don Aitkin , 1977-2016 8762859 1977 series - author novel
1 y separately published work icon Stability and Change in Australian Politics Don Aitkin , Canberra : Australian National University Press , 1969 Z814442 1969 single work
1 y separately published work icon The Colonel : A Political Biography of Sir Michael Bruxner Don Aitkin , Canberra : Australian National University Press , 1969 Z814439 1969 single work
1 Reviewers' '68 Choice Geoff Page , W. S. Ramson , Don Aitkin , Elizabeth Bray , 1968 single work review
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 28 December 1968; (p. 9)

— Review of An Eye for a Tooth : Poems Bruce Dawe , 1968 selected work poetry ; The White Thorntree : A Novel Frank Dalby Davison , 1968 single work novel ; The Unlucky Australians Frank Hardy , 1968 single work non-fiction ; The Invasion John Hay , 1968 single work novel ; The Little Lives of Certain Chairs a Table or Two and Other Inanimates of Our Acquaintance Barbara Blackman , 1998 selected work prose biography
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