Pamela Rushby Pamela Rushby i(A47738 works by)
Born: Established: 1947 Queensland, ;
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Pamela Rushby grew up and was educated in Ipswich, Queensland, apart from a period spent in Penang, Malaysia. She worked as an advertising copywriter, a publicity officer and a pre-school teacher. Rushby studied ancient history, journalism, art history, and writing and producing for television. As technology changed, she also wrote and produced multimedia texts.

In 1993, Rushby was awarded a Writers' Project Grant from the Literature Board of the Australia Council to travel to Egypt and Jordan and work on archaeological excavations to research a children's novel. She retains her interest in the area and its history, being shortlisted for the Text Prize in 2018 for an historical children's novel on the practice of mummy parties. She won a Churchill Fellowship in 1994 to travel to Canada and study educational television at TVOntario. In 2006, she received the May Gibbs Children's Literature Trust Fellowship.

The author of three dozen children's books, picture books, and plays, she has won the Davitt Award and the Ethel Turner Prize (NSW Premier's Literary Awards) and been shortlisted for many more, with particular success for her 2014 novel The Ratcatcher's Daughter.

She is the mother of Allison Rushby.

Most Referenced Works

Notes

  • Pamela Rushby has also written school readers.

  • For information about this author's works for children not included in AustLit, see Australian Children's Books by Marcie Muir and Kerry White (Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1992-2004).

Personal Awards

2019 recipient ASA Mentorship
2016 highly commended Scarlet Stiletto Awards Best Story with a Disabled Protagonist For 'Meryet and The Mystery of the Plundered Tomb'.
2012 recipient May Gibbs Children's Literature Trust Fellowship

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Those Girls Newtown : Walker Books Australia , 2024 27477675 2024 single work novel young adult historical fiction

'New, from award-winning historical novelist, Pamela Rushby, exploring the roles, and struggles, of women in wartime

'The poster had a picture of a tanned, healthy girl, wearing a regulation uniform hat and shorts that were, surely, anything but regulation.
When Hilly volunteers for the Women’s Land Army in 1942, she’s sixteen years old. She expects to be picking sun-kissed fruit and bottle-feeding fluffy white lambs, all while she's wearing a flattering outfit.

'Travelling to farms across Queensland, Hilly encounters backbreaking work, but also friendship and fellowship with other Land Army girls, Aileen and Glad, all seeking independence for their own reasons. War is a chance for a life away from family and familiarity, offering adventure and romance. But the poster didn’t mention crutching sheep or 4 am starts. Or the prejudice they would face, and that some men needed to be fought off, rather than fought for. In the midst of adversity, Hilly finds exactly what she is capable of … and it might be more than she ever thought possible. She is one of ‘those girls with grit’.' (Publication summary)

2024 shortlisted SWW Book Awards Fiction
y separately published work icon The Mud Puddlers Melbourne : Walker Books Australia , 2023 26168069 2023 single work children's fiction children's 'What lies hidden in the mud? What might happen if you look at it too long? And what will happen if you let it go? Twelve-year-old Nina is not happy. Her scientist parents are spending a year in Antarctica. And Nina's being sent to London to stay with her Aunt Bee, an intertidal archaeologist, who lives on a converted barge on the Thames. She's also a keen mud larker, combing the river mud for fascinating, long-forgotten articles from past lives. Nina arrives with an Attitude. Her parents have never left her behind before. It takes time for her to settle in, helped by the MudPuddlers, a local group of enthusiastic amateur mud larks, and especially by Molly, an elderly MudPuddler living on a nearby barge. Molly draws Nina into the magic and mystery of the ancient river and its treasures. When she finds herself stranded in time, in the Blitz in 1940, Nina and a very unwilling fellow traveller, Tom, become runaways, fumbling their way across wartime England, desperate to return to London. Will they ever see their families again?' (Publication summary) 
2024 shortlisted SWW Book Awards Children and Young Adult
2024 CBCA Book of the Year Awards Notable Book Younger Readers
2023 longlisted HNSA Historical Novel Prize Children and young adult
y separately published work icon Interned Newtown : Walker Books Australia , 2022 23605369 2022 single work children's fiction children's historical fiction

'Based on true events, Interned is a moving, well-researched and evocative historical fiction novel that highlights an often forgotten moment in Australian history.

It’s 1914. Gretta lives a privileged life in Singapore, the daughter of a businessman; Tilly lives a modest life in Brisbane, the daughter of a baker. When war breaks out and both countries turn on their families for being German, the two girls find themselves taken from their homes, interned at a camp in rural New South Wales. Far away from everything they have ever known, Gretta and Tilly are forced to face prejudice, overcome adversity and to make their own community.' (Publication summary)

2023 shortlisted Book Links Award for Historical Fiction
2023 CBCA Book of the Year Awards Notable Book Older Readers
Last amended 8 Sep 2021 13:22:31
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