Chaucer, Erasmus, Pope, Swift, Heller – and now Gail Morgan, scourge from a Sydney inner city convent school …
The Weekend Australian article by Mary Rose Liverani
Chaucer, Erasmus, Pope, Swift, Heller – and now Gail Morgan, scourge from a Sydney inner city convent school …
The Weekend Australian article by Mary Rose Liverani
Today’s holiday reading: The Day my Publisher Turned into a Dog – an extract from Gail Morgan’s latest novel …
Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) cover 1990
With all the subtlety of a short, sharp blow to the head with a sledge hammer, Gail Morgan batters the publishing industry to death in her new book, The Day my Publisher Turned into a Dog …
The Border Mail article 1989
The basis of Walk to Kulentufu is confilct – and obsession. East meets West, adventure triumphs over delay …
Australian Bookseller and Publisher article 1989
Gail Morgan began offering her latest work to potential publishers. It’s called The Day my Publisher Turned into a Dog and is a savavage, satirical look at the Australian bookselling industry …
Today’s People article by James Cockington
Continue reading “Today’s People – The Day my Publisher Turned into a Dog”
Independent booksellers provide a healthy alternative, says Carolyn Ford …
The Herald article by Carolyn Ford
Some occupations lend themselves more readily than others to the ungentle art of the spoof. Journalism and undertaking spring to mind …
Review by Kate Ahearne
The Book Launch of Walk to Kulentufu featuring guests such as George Negus. Also below are images from Gail’s TV Interview with George Negus.
Continue reading “Book Launch of Walk to Kulentufu and Today TV Interview with George Negus”
The Book Launch of The Day My Publisher Turned into a Dog. Excerpt read by Gretel Killeen.
Continue reading “Book Launch of The Day My Publisher Turned into a Dog”
The second book is supposed to be the hardest to write. Gail Morgan wrote hers “on a tide of anger and as therapy for the constant rejection” of her first, a Promise of rain Continue reading “Following a tide of anger, it’s steady as she goes”