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Running Water Community Press Running Water Community Press i(23839356 works by) (Organisation) assertion (a.k.a. Ptilotus Press)
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1 y separately published work icon Kuracca : Us Mob Writing, First Nation Voices Belinda Nelson-McDowell , (cover artist), Alice Springs : Running Water Community Press , 2023 26646387 2023 anthology poetry prose

'Kuracca ― meaning white sulphur crested cockatoo ― is a multi-lingual anthology featuring eleven Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women writing poetry, prose, songs and stories about their unique lives. All contributors are members of Canberra’s longest running Indigenous writers group called ‘Us Mob Writing’ and this book is dedicated to the late Wiradjuri Elder and award-winning writer, Kerry-Reed Gilbert. With a strong focus on inspiring people to write, the anthology includes both emerging and award-winning writers, a preface by Chairperson Us Mob Writing, Marissa McDowell and a foreword by Chairperson First Nations Australia Writers Network, Yvette Holt.' (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon Arelhekenhe Angkentye – Women’s Talk : Poems of Lyapirtneme from Arrernte Women in Central Australia Penny Drysdale (editor), Alice Springs : Running Water Community Press , 2021 21183420 2020 anthology poetry
1 1 y separately published work icon Living in Hope Frank Byrne , Frances Coughlan , Gerard Waterford , Alice Springs : Running Water Community Press , 2017 14216416 2017 single work autobiography

'The killing times were barely over in the Kimberley.
What I knew, even as a small boy, was that no-one argued with a whitefella. People talked in whispers.
I was still so small.
This is the story of the early years of my life. The story of a boy who was taken away from his mother and his family forever when he was just six years old. He had no say in it. His family had no say in it. The government had all the say in everything.

'A memoir of boyhood by a man who was removed as a child – from country, from culture and language, from family, from his mother.

'Filled with surprises and unlikely fun, this is more than just a story of surviving. From hiding out from the Japanese in spring-fed caves in the deep Kimberley, to being let loose in a paddock just like a poddy calf at Moola Bulla, to cowboy comics at the Beagle Bay mission.

'A story of white bosses, of priest bosses, of black stockmen and of staying out of trouble.

'With honesty and unexpected graciousness, Frank reminds us of a not-so-distant past and of how things happened for Aboriginal people in the North West.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

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