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Rebecca Huntley Rebecca Huntley i(7458536 works by)
Born: Established: 1972 Oxford, Oxfordshire,
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England,
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United Kingdom (UK),
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Western Europe, Europe,
;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Mother in the Mirror Rebecca Huntley , 2015 single work autobiography
— Appears in: Mothermorphosis : Australia's Best Storytellers Write About Becoming a Mother 2015; (p. 47-59)
1 y separately published work icon Nonna's Gnocchi Rebecca Huntley , Ilona Tar (illustrator), Lilyfield : Little People Publishing , 2014 7458573 2014 single work picture book children's

'This delightful children's story will almost certainly lead to a gnocchi-making session at your house. Make sure you have some potatoes in the cupboard! Subtly it reinforces the importance of traditional knowledge and of how it is passed from one generation to another. Sofia is learning just as her mother also learnt from Nonna. The illustrations are charming and the warm kitchen will be familiar to many readers.' (Publication summary)

1 3 y separately published work icon The Italian Girl Rebecca Huntley , St Lucia : University of Queensland Press , 2012 Z1852521 2012 single work autobiography

'A true story of love, loss and mothers and daughters across generations In 2001 Rebecca Huntley's maternal grandmother - her Italian nonna - died.

This sparked a decade-long search for the "truth" about her grandmother's life, and the lives of the men and women in her family from Innisfail, Northern Queensland, during the hard times of World War II. The nonna Rebecca knew was a kind-hearted and quiet individual. Short and slight, she was a wonderful cook who embroidered every day of her life. Rebecca loved her dearly but saw her as a conservative, pliant and generally uninteresting Italian woman. After her death, however, incredible stories of her nonna as a young woman surfaced and Rebecca realised that she didn't know her at all. Learning more about nonna stirred up old ghosts in Rebecca's relationship with her mother and challenged Rebecca's own sense of self as she, pregnant with her first child, had to wonder what it really means to be a mother. With evocative stories and tender honesty, Rebecca takes us on this significant search.' Source: http://uqp.com.au (Sighted 03/04/2012).

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