Linda Wells Linda Wells i(A88525 works by)
Gender: Female
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BiographyHistory

Linda Wells has lived in Central Australia and worked as a teacher on desert communities as well as in Alice Springs. She has a PhD in creative, post-colonial possibilities for writing Australian history and is a published author. She is the mother of Warlpiri writer Marly Wells.

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2024 joint winner Western Australian Premier's Book Awards Daisy Utemorrah Award with Marly Wells, for 'Dusty Tracks'.

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Living in Tin Port Adelaide : Ginninderra Press , 2023 26008049 2023 single work prose 'The Bungalow began in 1914, as a tin shed in the small colonial outpost of Alice Springs. It was built initially to house Topsy Smith, of Arabana descent, and her seven children after their Welsh-born father, Bill Smith, had died. Over the years that followed, many more children with Aboriginal mothers and (largely absent) white fathers were brought to live at the Bungalow until, by 1929, when it was relocated out of town, about 60 children were living and growing up there. They were cared for primarily by Topsy Smith as well as the town’s first schoolteacher, Ida Standley. The other central adult figure of this story is Sergeant Stott who oversaw the establishment and operation of the home. Drawing on archival documents, oral histories and interviews with living descendants, this story gives voice to women, children, and First Nations people. Researched history is interspersed with passages of creative non-fiction that create a palpable sense of time and place and bring the story to life. The complexity and nuance of engagement between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians is also explored; relationships that have for so long been downplayed in works of Australian history. As well as presenting the fascinating and pivotal story of the Bungalow in Alice Springs from 1914 to 1929, this work offers a model for new ways of creative, postcolonial storytelling about Australia, her history and her present, and the inextricable links between the two.' (Publication summary) 
 
2024 winner Territory Read Book of the Year Chief Minister's NT Book Awards Non-fiction
Last amended 7 May 2024 12:43:53
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