Many a writer has experienced that dreadful feeling of sitting across the desk from a publisher awaiting the verdict …
The Sunday Mail article by Sandra McLean
Many a writer has experienced that dreadful feeling of sitting across the desk from a publisher awaiting the verdict …
The Sunday Mail article by Sandra McLean
The emotional issue of school sport and its dangers is boiling again, report David McKnight and Paulene Turner …
Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) article 18 Feb 1987
Continue reading “When moulding men goes wrong”
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
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”