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Joanne Tuscano Joanne Tuscano i(A73604 works by) (a.k.a. Jo Tuscano)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon This Is Where You Have To Go Lynda Holden , Joanne Tuscano , Neutral Bay : Pantera Press , 2024 27911947 2024 single work autobiography

'150,000 adoptions took place in Australia between 1950 and 1975. It is estimated that one in 15 was forced. Proud Dhunghutti woman, laywer, human rights advocate and former midwife Lynda Holden tells her own heartbreaking story and of her fight for justice.

'In 1970, Lynda was eighteen, unmarried and pregnant when she was forced to give her baby up for adoption. She was sent by a doctor to a Catholic girls' home for unmarried mothers, and told she'd have no hope of keeping her child because she was Aboriginal.

'After twenty-six years, Lynda was finally able to make contact with her lost son – but the much wished for reunion didn't go well. When she looked into the adoption records, she found a web of lies – lies about her family, the baby's father, her 'consent' for the adoption – and her Indigenous heritage had been completely erased.

'So began a quest for justice: Lynda took on the Catholic Church in an attempt to right the wrongs of the past. In this incredibly powerful memoir, she sheds light on the lasting impacts of forced adoption on mothers, children and their families, and gives voice to the countless women who have been silenced for generations.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon The River Child Joanne Tuscano , Fyshwick : Odyssey Books , 2021 23593423 2021 single work novel

'Standing beside Elise’s grave, Siobhan Montrell remembers how her mother finally blew the perfect smoke ring on the day that Elise disappeared. Remembers the day that would change and define her life forever.

'The toddler’s body was found in the river near Gables Guesthouse. Only eleven years old at the time, Siobhan has carried the guilt of Elise’s death with her since that day.

'Twenty-eight years later, Siobhan returns to Rachley Island, having inherited Gables — guesthouse and family home — from her aunt. Cleaning the property to prepare it for sale, she discovers an old book in which her aunt used to draw and write, revealing the truth about the tragic drowning.

'The River Child is a tale of grief and guilt, deceit and secrets, and ultimately forgiveness.'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 That Appears to Be the Case Joanne Tuscano , 2019 single work essay
— Appears in: Westerly , vol. 64 no. 2 2019; (p. 149-155)
'At 9.50am in the morning, the heat was enough to make the lawyers take off their suit jackets to walk the short distance from the car park to the Alice Springs Convention Centre. It was the 13th of March, 2017. Merit McDonald and a small group of protestors from Shut Youth Prisons held up their placards as the cameras rolled. Dylan Voller was one of them. People started arriving and entered the building, thankful for the air conditioning. Indigenous elders, parents and grandparents, children, relatives, interested members of the public, senior and junior counsel, representatives of Indigenous organisations and those giving evidence had come together for the Royal Commission into the Detention and Protection of Children in the Northern Territory.' (Introduction)
1 Writing Back on the Block Joanne Tuscano , 2009 single work column
— Appears in: Newswrite : The NSW Writers' Centre Magazine , October/November no. 187 2009; (p. 4-5)
1 6 y separately published work icon Back on the Block : Bill Simon's Story Bill Simon , Des Montgomerie , Joanne Tuscano , Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2009 Z1592621 2009 single work autobiography

'Stolen, beaten, deprived of his liberty and used as child labour, Bill Simon was locked up in the notorious Kinchela Boys Home for 8 years where he was told his mother didn't want him, and that he was 'the scum of the earth'. His experiences there would shape his life forever...

Bill Simon got angry, something which poisoned his life for the next 2 decades. A life of self-abuse and crime which finally saw him imprisoned.. From The Block in Sydney's Redfern, one of the most contentious and misunderstood places in Australia, Bill Simon tells the truth about life in one of Australia's most terrible juvenile institutions, where thousands of boys were warehoused and abused.' Source: Publisher's blurb

1 Sweet and Sour Joanne Tuscano , 2001 single work short story
— Appears in: New England Review , Winter no. 14 2001; (p. 15)
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