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Blanche d'Alpuget

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Alma mater
  
University of Sydney

Spouse
  
Bob Hawke (m. 1995)

Years active
  
1973-present

Children
  
Louis Pratt

Blanche d'Alpuget PM Blanche d39Alpuget rejects Keating claims her book is unfair 15

Born
  
Josephine Blanche d'Alpuget 3 January 1944 (age 73)Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (
1944-01-03
)

Occupation
  
Biographernovelistactivist

Genre
  
biographydramaromance

Notable works
  
Books
  
Hawke: The Prime Minister, The Young Lion, Winter in Jerusalem, Monkeys in the dark, On Longing

Similar
  
Bob Hawke, Hazel Hawke, Clem Hawke, Paul Keating, David Malouf

Preview interview with bob hawke and blanche d alpuget


Josephine Blanche d'Alpuget (born 3 January 1944) is an Australian writer and the second wife of the longest-serving Australian Labor Party Prime Minister, Bob Hawke.

Contents

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Bob hawke and blanche d alpuget


Biography

Blanche d'Alpuget Blanche D39Alpuget Louise M Cooper

D'Alpuget is the only child of Josephine Curgenven and Louis Albert Poincare d'Alpuget (1915–2006), journalist, author, blue water yachtsman and champion boxer. Her great-aunt, Blanche d'Alpuget, after whom she was named, was a pioneer woman journalist in Sydney and a patron of artists. Her father was a sports and feature writer and also news editor of a Sydney newspaper, The Sun.

D'Alpuget attended SCEGGS Darlinghurst and briefly the University of Sydney, before running away from home following a fight with her father. She worked at The Sun's rival newspaper, The Daily Mirror, then moved to Indonesia at the age of 22 with her first husband, Tony Pratt, whom she had married in 1965. She and Pratt have a son, Louis, an artist and sculptor and a co-founder of Mungo, a Sydney artists' colony. While in Indonesia, d'Alpuget worked in the Australian Embassy's news and information bureau; later she was a volunteer worker in the National Museum of Indonesia, leading a team that recatalogued the oriental ceramic collection of Chinese export ware. She was the world's youngest member of the famous English-founded Oriental Ceramic Society. After spending four years in Indonesia, d'Alpuget lived for a year in Malaysia. She travelled widely, and to remote areas, in both countries.

Blanche d'Alpuget wwwabcnetaucompassgodinthelodgeimgBlanch

In 1973 she returned to Australia and became active in the women's movement. She began writing in 1974, inspired by her experiences in South East Asia. She has won a number of literary awards for both fiction and non-fiction including, in 1987, the inaugural Australasian Prize for Commonwealth Literature. She first met Bob Hawke in Jakarta, in 1970. They met again in 1976 when she interviewed him for a biography she was writing on Sir Richard Kirby. This meeting led to a long and sporadic love affair which eventually culminated in their marriage in 1995. D'Alpuget and Pratt had divorced in 1986. Between 1979 and 1982 d'Alpuget researched and wrote a biography of Hawke.

In 1995 she joined the board of Robert J. Hawke & Associates, a business consultancy primarily focussed on China. For fifteen years d'Alpuget abandoned her career as a writer and travelled the world with her new husband, visiting not only capital cities but remote areas of China, Inner Mongolia, Moldova, Easter Island, Palau, Kazakhstan, the North West Frontier of Pakistan and the Antarctic peninsula. She returned to writing in 2008.

Blanche d'Alpuget Blanche D39Alpuget Zimbio

In 2013 she released The Young Lion, the first novel of a quartet. It is set in the 12th century and is about the birth of the House of Plantaganet. The book focuses on Henry II and his union with Eleanor of Aquitaine, who was Queen of France and subsequently became Queen of England. The Young Lion received favourable reviews. Geraldine Doogue said "this is exuberant story-telling history, full of sex, passion and politics." while Stephanie Dowrick notes that "few writers are both earthy and erudite, Blanche d'Alpuget is. Her narrative is so fresh and energetic you will swear she's bringing us a first-hand account." The magazine Books + Publishing made similar comments stating that "Blanche d'Alpuget's first historical fiction novel comes as a breath of fresh air as she introduces readers to Henry II and the beginning of the House of Plantagenet. D'Alpuget offers readers a well-researched history of her subject, which of course incorporates the required affairs, plots and intrigues that we have come to expect from any historical novel about royalty and life at court." The second in the quartet, The Lion Rampant, was published in 2014 to critical acclaim. Thomas Keneally said, "this is fresh and invigorating and absolutely gripping. The revision she provides of the motives and character of Thomas Becket will rivet readers as they have not been riveted since Hilary Mantel's Thomas Cromwell." She completed the third novel in the quartet in 2015 but has held it back from the market until the fourth is finished in early 2017. The whole quartet should be available in late 2017. Meanwhile she is researching the Second Crusade.

Her works include:

Blanche d'Alpuget Blanche d39Alpuget39s The Young Lion Books and Arts ABC Radio

  • Mediator: A Biography of Sir Richard Kirby (1977)
  • Monkeys in the Dark (1980)
  • Turtle Beach (1981)
  • Robert J. Hawke: a biography (1982)
  • Winter in Jerusalem (1986)
  • Lust (an essay, 1992)
  • White Eye (1993)
  • On Longing (essay, 2008)
  • Hawke: The Prime Minister (2010)
  • The Young Lion (2013)
  • The Lion Rampant (2014)
  • Her essays, Lust, which dealt with paedophilia, and On Longing, caused controversy.

    Turtle Beach was made into a feature film in 1989 featuring Greta Scacchi and Jack Thompson.

    All d'Alpuget's novels have been translated into other languages.

    Asher Keddie played her in the 2010 multi-award winning telemovie, Hawke.

    Memberships (current and former)

  • Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
  • International PEN (Sydney Centre)
  • Australian Labor Party
  • Oral History Association of Australia (president of Australian Capital Territory branch, 1980–1981)
  • Chairman and Deputy Chairman of the Australian Society of Authors, 1990–1991
  • Women's Electoral Lobby
  • Commissioner of the Australian Film Commission, 1986–1991
  • Chair of Australian Society of Authors, 1991
  • Board member of the Arts Advocacy Centre
  • Co-patron Australia – China Friendship Society (NSW Branch), since 2003
  • Goodwill Ambassador of Austcare, 1989–1995
  • Patron of Inala, since 2000 (a Rudolf Steiner organisation supporting individuals with disabilities)
  • Achievements and awards

  • 1980 – Sydney PEN Golden Jubilee award for Fiction
  • 1981 – NSW Premier's Award for Non-Fiction
  • 1982 and 1983 – Braille Book of the Year Award
  • 1982 – The Age Novel of the Year Award for Turtle Beach
  • 1982 – South Australian Government's Award for Fiction
  • 1987 – Inaugural Commonwealth Award for Literature – Australasian Division
  • Website

  • Blanche d'Alpuget
  • References

    Blanche d'Alpuget Wikipedia