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Anson Cameron Anson Cameron i(A26071 works by)
Born: Established: 1961 Shepparton, Shepparton area, Goulburn - Campaspe area, Northern Victoria, Victoria, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Neil Balme : A Tale of Two Men Neil Balme , Anson Cameron , Melbourne : Viking , 2022 24431783 2022 single work autobiography

'The long-awaited memoir of one of AFL’s hardest players and most respected behind-the-scenes coaches.

'‘You’ve got to have that madness in your mind to win, win, win. You’ve got to have that somewhere, but it can’t consume you.’

'This story begins in infamy. Everyone’s first glimpse of the man is of ferocious blows struck in grand finals, his name splashed in headlines across the back pages of the tabloids. It’s the 1970s, it’s Richmond: kill or be killed.

'There was a time when almost every football watcher who heard Neil Balme’s name would react with disapproval. My God, what a bruiser . . . A dangerous fellow . . . And those who knew him would quickly deny these accusations. He’s not a brute, you know, he’s a thinker . . . A mild-mannered bloke, easygoing. The great paradox of Balme is the violence and the pacifism, the mayhem and the calm, the rough justice and the gentleness. He’s a cold-blooded thug; he’s a soft-hearted healer; he’s a villain and a hero.

'Balme is unique in having spent longer than anyone else in clubland. Richmond, Norwood, Melbourne, Collingwood, Geelong and Richmond again – over fifty years. He’s seen and created limitless change in those decades. So how did Neil Balme go from being the infamous on-field enforcer of the 1970s to the avuncular guru the football world knows and loves today?

'After eleven premierships, an aura surrounds the man. Get Balme to your club and premierships will follow. What has he to tell us of football, of the high times and the low, of the champs and the egos? Of Royce and GR, of Diamond Joe, of Eddie and Mick, of Bomber, of Dimma? And of life and the human heart?

'Balme’s tale is, unsurprisingly, a mix of hard truth and unerring compassion.' (Publication summary)

1 The Miserable Creep of COVID Anson Cameron , 2020 single work short story
— Appears in: Meanjin , Spring vol. 79 no. 3 2020; Meanjin Online 2020;
1 y separately published work icon Strange Blasphemy Anson Cameron , Sydney : Vintage Australia , 2019 15595069 2019 single work novel

'At a surf campus, a weekend of cultural exchange begins, during which a group of less-advantaged boys from Dallas Islamic Academy are taught to surf by boys from Yarraside Boys’ Grammar, an elite private school. A sexual encounter takes place on the beach between Seb, a rich kid from the Grammar, and Fariad, a Muslim Afghan refugee from the Academy. Little does anyone know that this encounter has been unwittingly recorded by a drone, sent up by one of the Grammar schoolkids to watch the antics of the surfers.

'What then ensues no one can predict. Sides are taken. Threats are made. Seb’s and Fariad’s families and communities are involved. In not giving his side of the story, Seb enters a living nightmare, where, in his attempts to protect Fariad, and defuse the situation, he unleashes a storm of hatred, suspicion, lies, deceit … and ultimately murder.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 An Essential Story for All Australians Anson Cameron , 2016 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 9-10 April 2016; (p. 24) The Saturday Age , 9-10 April 2016; (p. 24)

— Review of Talking to My Country : The Book That Every Australian Should Read Stan Grant , 2016 single work criticism
1 The Shaming of Lionel Shriver Anson Cameron , 2016 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 22-23 October 2016; (p. 3)
1 A River Runs with Bitumen and Bastardry Anson Cameron , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 31 October - 1 November 2015; (p. 24-25) The Age , 31 October 2015; (p. 24)

— Review of Ghost River Tony Birch , 2015 single work novel
1 2 y separately published work icon Boyhoodlum Anson Cameron , Sydney : Random House Australia , 2015 8701163 2015 single work autobiography

'A hilarious memoir and a crash-investigator’s report into how not to be a boy. Anson Cameron was born in the Victorian town of Shepparton in 1961, the son of a country lawyer and an English rose. Through the shoeless neighbourhoods and surrounding forests, sipping a Blue Heaven milkshake, shooting at anything that moves, and singing an Irish Rovers song, this boy wends his way smiling and lying and creating chaos in his wake. He joins a peeing club and becomes a tycoon of urine; assassinates the Cisco Kid; keeps a deaf man as an entertainment; starts a war between hags; electrocutes a friend’s mother; and has a Bodgie clubbed by the police before he is seven. His war on schoolteachers means he is forced to cycle home from school dyed a different colour every day. At high school, with a maturing political outlook, he joins a gang of Anglos to fight a war on Wogs. There is hardly a trap of vanity into which he doesn’t fall. With a wry narrator and a cast of rural originals, Boyhoodlum is a clear window into a time and place. It is the story of a family and a town through the eyes of a boy who laughed at them and loved them equally.' (Publication summary)

1 An Addiction to a Liberating Drug Anson Cameron , 2015 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 6-7 June 2015; (p. 32-33) The Age , 6 June 2015; (p. 34)

— Review of The Simple Act of Reading 2015 anthology essay
1 8 y separately published work icon The Last Pulse Anson Cameron , North Sydney : Random House Australia , 2014 8126114 2014 single work novel

'A blackly funny novel about an unlikely hero, and his misadventures on the flood he has created.

'In the drought-stricken Riverland town of Bartel in South Australia, after the suicide of his wife, Merv Rossiter steals a boat. He trucks north with his eight-year-old-daughter Em into Queensland. There he blows up the dam at Waroo Station, releasing a flood through outback New South Wales into South Australia.

'As the authorities search for them, Merv and Em ride the flood south in their stolen boat, rescuing a Queensland Minister from the water, and then a young blackfella who fancies he sang the river to life all by himself.

'Meanwhile, in Canberra, the political flotsam carried by Merv's renegade ocean brings the Federal Government to its knees.

'The Last Pulse is the story of the last flood that will ever flow down the inland artery that was the Darling River. The stream is broken now and the agriculture and lives of South Australians have been appropriated with the water by a people a thousand kilometres to the north.

'Throughout their misadventures on his flood, Merv promises his daughter they will be heroes in South Australia, and that they are sailing towards victory parades and happiness. The other crewmembers, however, know he is heading towards a violent reckoning with Australia itself.

'Blackly humorous, poignant, timely, The Last Pulse is Anson Cameron's finest work to date.' (Publication summary)

1 1 form y separately published work icon Child Lost on Goolumbulla Anson Cameron , ( dir. Benj Binks ) Australia : 2013 Z1856578 2013 single work film/TV
1 Irresistible Persuasion of Words Creates Crash of Permanent Crescendo Anson Cameron , 2013 single work review
— Appears in: The Sydney Morning Herald , 24-25 August 2013; (p. 30-31) The Saturday Age , 24 August 2013; (p. 25) The Canberra Times , 24 August 2013; (p. 20)

— Review of Lexicon Max Barry , 2013 single work novel
1 Happy to Rust in Peace, the Winner Keeps Almost All Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 21-22 December 2012; (p. 44)
1 Doomsayers Leave Us to Our Own Infernal Devices Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column humour
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 8 December 2012; (p. 48)
1 Unleashing the Daughters of Boundless Energy Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 24 November 2012; (p. 48)
1 Where Grinning Gnomes Bear Witness to Grief Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 27 October 2012; (p. 52)
1 How the Burqa Is Wiping the Smile off Our Faces Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 13 October 2012; (p. 48)
1 Odours of Experts Talking Out Their Rear Ends Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 29 September 2012; (p. 44)
1 No Wolf at the Door Where Bean Had Once Been Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 15 September 2012; (p. 48)
Anson Cameron expresses his feelings over the death of his pet dog. Cameron was in Ubud, Indonesia at the time of the dog's accidental death.
1 Your Way or Hemingway Anson Cameron , 2012 single work column
— Appears in: The Saturday Age , 8 September 2012; (p. 15)
Anson Cameron envisages a digital future where the re-writing of existing, often classic, novels runs rife.
1 y separately published work icon The Story Fleshed Out Anson Cameron , Melbourne : Jim Pavlidis , 2012 Z1882764 2012 single work short story
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