AustLit logo

AustLit

Robin Bowles Robin Bowles i(A104939 works by)
Gender: Female
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

BiographyHistory

Robin Bowles has written true crime books and crime fiction.

In 2019, her Accidental Death was longlisted for the Davitt Award (true crime).

Most Referenced Works

Personal Awards

2023 longlisted Davitt Award Best True Crime Book for 'Collateral Damage'.

Awards for Works

y separately published work icon Death on the Derwent : Sue Neill-Fraser's Story Brunswick : Scribe , 2019 15419462 2019 single work non-fiction crime

'Don't fool yourself that the innocent never go to jail.

'When Bob Chappell disappeared from his yacht, moored in the Derwent Estuary near the Royal Yacht Club of Tasmania's marina, on the night of 26 January 2009, he left behind his pipe and tobacco — something that his partner of 18 years, Sue Neill-Fraser, knew he would never willingly do. What she didn't know was that despite no body, no weapon, no cause of death, and no witnesses, she would soon become the only suspect in Chappell’s disappearance.

'In their haste to wrap up the case, the police charged Neill-Fraser with murder. In her eagerness to assist police, she virtually talked her way into their hands. And after a lengthy trial that resulted in a guilty verdict, the judge delivered Neill-Fraser a crushing 26-year sentence.

'But was the verdict unsafe? Many of Australia’s leading legal minds think so, and other reasonable hypotheses have been mooted about what might have happened on the Derwent that night. The Tasmanian government has changed its laws to give Neill-Fraser one last crack at proving her innocence, because that is what it's come to now — proving her innocence.

'The result of years of investigation, and based on extensive interviews with all the key players — including Sue Neill-Fraser and her family, local underworld figures, and legal luminaries — Death on the Derwent is a riveting story of justice not served.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

2020 longlisted Davitt Award Best True Crime Book
y separately published work icon Accidental Death? Accidental Death? When Things May Not Be As They Seem Carlton North : Scribe , 2018 19727325 2018 multi chapter work non-fiction crime

'This collection of stories centres on the idea of 'accidental death', and the upheaval caused in the lives of those who lose a loved one in this way. Several of the cases examined here turned out, on investigation, not to be accidents at all. Some were crimes. Some remain unexplained; others were shown to be just what they appeared to be. What connects them is what happens to those involved: suddenly, grieving people are thrown into the spotlight. There is no privacy and nowhere to hide. Like it or not, and often through no fault of their own, these people become part of an investigation, subject to the scrutiny of police, media, the courts, and the court of public opinion.

'Featuring a range of meticulously researched cases — from the tragic story of Akon Guode, jailed in 2017 for driving her children into a lake, to the accidental death of cricketer Phillip Hughes — Australia’s ‘queen of true crime’ delves deep into the criminal justice system. With Bowles’s trademark compassion and forensic attention to detail, Accidental Death explores the reality of ordinary people who find themselves in extraordinary situations when an accident upends their lives.'

(Source: publisher's blurb)

2019 longlisted Davitt Award Best True Crime Book
y separately published work icon Jail Birds : Australian Women Doing Crime South Melbourne : Echo Publishing , 2016 9465484 2016 multi chapter work biography interview

'It is commonly believed that women are the gentle sex, but reading some of these accounts of crimes committed and lives endured may make you think again. The skill or sheer brazenness involved or, in other stories, the apparent miscarriages of justice, will take your breath away.

'Two of the cases in this new book by Australia's leading female true writer, Robin Bowles, involve murder, including the lead story which, for the first time, details the controversial case of Tasmanian Susan Neill-Fraser. There is also a prison breakout, a mysterious disappearance, child abduction and drug smuggling.

'The protagonists themselves have contributed a new perspective on the information currently available via prison interviews Robin conducted with Tania Herman, Renae Lawrence (by illegal mobile phone in Renae's case!) and Susan Neill-Fraser, plus other interviews with people never interviewed before about these cases. A long-awaited collection of stories by Australia's true crime queen. Stories from Australia's female crims, including Tania Herman, Renae Lawrence and Susan Neill-Fraser telling their experiences directly to Robin from their prison homes. ' (Publication summary)

2017 longlisted Davitt Award Best True Crime Book
Last amended 30 May 2019 11:47:57
Other mentions of "" in AustLit:
    X