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Michele Field

Michele Field

Michele Field (1942–2020) was an American-born writer, editor, and scholar who lived and worked in Australia in the seventies and early eighties. Having completed her doctorate on Jorge Luis Borges, Field moved to London where she was a regular correspondent for the Sydney Morning Herald and wrote columns for the Times Literary Supplement and Weekend Australian. She acted as a cultural ambassador of sorts in London, both as a representative for the Australia Council and as a local informant for Leo Schofield when the latter began his directorship of the Sydney Festival in 1998. With Timothy Willett, she co-edited Convict love tokens : the leaden hearts the convicts left behind (1998).

Abandonments, magic papers, and dogs with bones

June 1980, no. 21 09 June 1980
Frank Moorhouse recently sued Angus and Robertson for failing to return four of his manuscripts. The publishers found The Electrical Experience before the case came to trial; the author won his claim on Conference-ville and Tales of Mystery and Romance but lost on The Americans, Baby. This judgment added a new word to authors’ conversations – ‘abandonment’, meaning that an author’s roug ... (read more)

Soundings column | Michele Field on the literary prize

October 1980, no. 25 16 September 2022
American authors and publishers like to choose sides. The adversaries are seldom strictly Authors v Publishers – some best-selling novelists often join the publishers’ team, and publishers of new fiction like Farrar, Straus & Giroux line up on the authors’ side. Last May the battleground was drawn again in the national Book Awards (that’s not the old capital-N National Book Awards, or ... (read more)