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Kevin Rudd Kevin Rudd i(A103029 works by) (birth name: Kevin Michael Rudd)
Born: Established: 1957 Nambour, Nambour area, Nambour - Palmwoods - Yandina area, Sunshine Coast Hinterland, South East Queensland, Queensland, ;
Gender: Male
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2 6 y separately published work icon Not for the Faint-hearted : A Reflection On Life, Politics and Purpose Kevin Rudd , Sydney : Pan Macmillan Australia , 2017 12329487 2017 single work autobiography

'In 2007, Kevin Rudd became only the third Labor prime minister since the Second World War, after Whitlam and Hawke, to win government from opposition. In doing so he also defeated, and unseated, John Howard, the longest-serving conservative prime minister since Menzies. 

'So who was the man behind the phenomenal success of the Kevin07 campaign? This Mandarin-speaking professional diplomat, committed Christian and self-described policy wonk, who grew up as the son of a dairy farmer in rural Queensland to become the 26th prime minister of Australia? 

'While journalists, the professional commentariat and Rudd's political foes have together felled forests writing about the 'real' Kevin Rudd, until now he has refused to provide any written response to his many critics. That changes with this volume, which takes us to his election as prime minister in 2007. This is the first time we hear from the man himself, in his own words, about what makes him tick. 

'With a level of self-reflection, and a capacity for sending himself up that is rarely seen in political autobiography, Rudd chronicles a childhood shaped by the love of his mother and tragically disrupted by the death of his father when he was eleven - an event that left the family without a home or an income, and which would foster in him a visceral passion for social justice, and the foundations of his own political vision. 

'He tells of his years as a budding China scholar, his many misadventures as a young diplomat in Stockholm and Beijing, his marriage to the remarkable Thérèse Rein and the centrality of his tight-knit family to both his private and public lives. He takes us through his years as Queensland's most powerful public servant during the days of the Goss government, and the soul-destroying moment of losing his first election to Federal Parliament in 1996, before finally prevailing through the maze of Labor factional politics to win his seat in 1998. 

'Rudd's account of the next nine long years in Opposition lays bare the inner workings of our national politics, including the absurdities of the factional system, the essential nature of Australian conservatism, and the arrogance of the Howard government, culminating in Howard's two greatest follies: the decision to take Australia to war in Iraq, and the introduction of WorkChoices. He also describes the monumental task of wresting office from a conservative prime minister who tried every trick in the book to hold on to power. 

'Rudd also carefully chronicles the evolution of his own deepest beliefs, values and political convictions over many decades, long before his entry to Parliament. He describes his book as 'an essay in encouragement' for those considering a public life who are committed to changing the world for the many, not the few, but are uncertain if they have the stomach for it. 

'This is an optimistic book, written with passion, conviction and insight. It is the first in a two-volume autobiography. It covers the unlikely rise of the 'boy from Eumundi' to the most powerful office in the land. ' (Publication Summary)
 

1 26 y separately published work icon Jasper and Abby and the Great Australia Day Kerfuffle Kevin Rudd , Rhys Muldoon , Carla Zapel (illustrator), Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2010 Z1659999 2010 single work picture book children's

'It was a special day at the Lodge. There was going to be a party. A big party. Abby the dog was there. Jasper the cat was there. But ... so was a scruffy little dog.

'The Prime Minister receives many letters and emails from children asking about Jasper and Abby, and he often tells his friends, colleagues and staff stories of the antics of his family pets. Having heard these stories, Rhys Muldoon - who has been friends with Kevin Rudd for many years - encouraged the Prime Minister to write a children's book.

'Proceeds from this book go to The Centre for Community Child Health, at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne.' (Publication summary)

1 Prime Minister Kevin Rudd Speaks About the Importance of Biography Kevin Rudd , 2009 extract prose
— Appears in: Biography Footnotes , no. 3 2009;
'At the launch of Tom Keneally's history, Australians: Origins to Eureka, on 27 August 2009 at the National Library of Australia, Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd spoke eloquently on the important place of biography in telling our nation’s history.' Source: Biography Footnotes 3 (2009).
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