Nancy Phelan
Nancy Phelan (2 August 1913 – 11 January 2008) was an Australian writer who published over 25 books, including novels, biographies, memoirs, travel books and a cookbook.[1] She travelled widely throughout Europe, the Pacific, Asia and the Middle East. Life and careerNancy Eleanor Creagh was born in Sydney, and had "a magical childhood, spent wandering the shores of Sydney Harbour near Chinamans Beach and The Spit on Middle Harbour with her friends and extended family".[1] She studied at the Conservatorium of Music and the University of Sydney.[2] However, as a teenager she saw the limitations of her suburban life and was keen to travel, so in 1938 she bought a one-way ticket to England. She met her husband, Raymond "Pete" Phelan, in London near the beginning of the war, and had her daughter, Vanessa, there. She and her daughter were evacuated to Devon where she spent her war years while her husband was in the Navy.[1] She returned to Australia with her family in 1945 and quickly joined the thriving arts scene of Potts Point, Kings Cross and Elizabeth Bay. In 1946, she obtained work as a visual aids officer with the South Pacific Commission,[1] and travelled frequently to the South Pacific islands. In 1951, she became assistant organiser for Island literature in the Commission's Social Development Section, but she resigned in 1956 to write full-time.[2] Her first book, Atoll Holiday, published in 1958, was inspired by her three-month stay in the Gilbert Islands.[1] Her writings of her travelling alone in places such as Turkey and post-war Japan "shocked her readership".[1] In addition to writing books, she also wrote short stories and articles, and was a reviewer for The Sydney Morning Herald in 1970 and the Melbourne Age in 1972.[2] Phelan was the niece of Amy (1876—1939) and Louise Mack (1870—1935), a Hobart-born writer who became the first female war correspondent during the First World War, and the cousin of Australian conductor, Charles Mackerras. She wrote biographies of both. Her friends included writers like Patrick White, Kylie Tennant, Dorothy Hewett, Jessica Anderson, Nancy Keesing, Elizabeth Harrower and Peter Porter, and the artist Jeffrey Smart.[1] The Patrick White Award judges said that she wrote with "delicious verve and humour" and that her "passion for life has led her to explore other cultures and to write memorably about them whether in fiction or non-fiction".[3] Towards the end of her life, Phelan said that she wanted to push her prose towards poetry: "Poetry gets to the crux of things in a beautiful and arresting way ... That's the sort of writing I would like to be able to do. I don't know that I will ever get there. It's a very difficult job, writing, isn't it?"[4] Awards and nominations
WorksNovels
Autobiographies and memoirs
Biographies
Travel
Other non-fiction
NotesReferences
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