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Kate Forsyth

Kate Forsyth (born 3 June 1966) is an Australian author. She is best known for her historical novel Bitter Greens, which interweaves a retelling of the Rapunzel fairy tale with the true life story of the woman who first told the tale, the 17th century French writer Charlotte-Rose de Caumont de La Force.

Kate Forsyth
Kate Forsyth in 2007.
BornKatherine Emma Humphrey[1]
(1966-06-03) 3 June 1966 (age 57)
Sydney, Australia
Occupation
  • Writer
  • poet
  • journalist
NationalityAustralian
Genre
Website
www.kateforsyth.com.au

Forsyth is also the author of several children's books, including The Gypsy Crown, The Puzzle Ring, The Starthorn Tree, The Wildkin's Curse, The Starkin Crown and Dragon Gold. She has also published two heroic fantasy series, The Witches of Eileanan[2] and Rhiannon's Ride, the poetry collection Radiance, and the novel Full Fathom Five under her maiden name, Kate Humphrey. She is a five-time Aurealis Award winner.[3]

She is married with three children, and lives in Sydney, New South Wales. She is also a direct descendant of Charlotte Barton, the author of Australia's earliest known children's book. Forsyth's older sister, Belinda Murrell, is also an author for children and young adults and their younger brother, Nick Humphrey, is a nonfiction author.[4]

Journalism Edit

After graduating in a Bachelor of Arts in Literature from Macquarie University, Forsyth worked as a full-time journalist, including Editor of Hair and deputy editor of Money Watch before quitting to work freelance, writing articles for Vogue Australia, Black+White, Studio Bambini, Mode Brides, Interiors and Australian Collections amongst others.

Freelancing allowed her to concentrate more on her poetry and to be President of the Poets Union. She publishes her poetry under her maiden name, Kate Humphrey. This has appeared in Australian newspapers, such as The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, and The Bulletin, and domestic and international literary magazines.

Author Edit

Writing in The Sydney Morning Herald Melanie Kembrey rates Forsyth as an "internationally acclaimed author...best known for her re-imaginings of fairy stories from a feminist perspective."[5][6]

Forsyth wrote "Full Fathom Five" as the thesis for her Master of Arts in Writing, and then, to relieve the tedium of studying theorists such as Lacan, Derrida and de Saussure for her exams, she started reading a multi-book fantasy series. The turning point was when her husband, Greg Forsyth, suggested that she write such a series herself.[citation needed]

Forsyth undertook a doctorate in fairy-tale retelling at the University of Technology, Sydney.[7][8][9] Her novel Bitter Greens was written as the creative component of her doctorate,[10][11] which one reviewer felt resulted in a story that was "two books',[12] and subsequently Forsyth examined the many different retellings of Rapunzel in The Rebirth of Rapunzel: A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower,[13] which reviewer Belinda Calderone considers "remarkably clear" when "Forsyth is dealing with such a wide-ranging time period, and simultaneously presenting three kinds of writing.[14]

Forsyth is active in presenting workshops for writers,[15][16] and is a frequently a public speaker,[17] often in schools,[18] and also in literary festivals and conferences,[19] bookshops, libraries and museums,[20][21] on fantasy, folk tales and the role of women in them.[22] With Joan London, Andy Griffiths and David Malouf she contributed to The Simple Act of Reading, a compilation of essays and memoir pieces detailing the way reading has guided these writers.[23][24]

Forsyth is a generous mentor for, and collaborator with, other writers and creatives including co-author Kim Wilkins and illustrator Kathleen Jennings for The Silver Well, which won the 2017 Aurealis Award for Best Collection; Sarah Mills with whom she presented the combination cooking and book-review show Word of Mouth TV; artist Lorena Carrington[25][26] with whom she partnered on Vasilisa the Wise and Other Tales of Brave Young Women in 2019 and others in their series of illustrated feminist fairy tales since;[5][27] and with sister Belinda Murrell for joint research on their Searching for Charlotte.

Reception Edit

Of her The Rebirth of Rapunzel: A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower,[14] Melissa Mullins writes that Forsyth "weaves together the strands of personal narrative, creative process, and historical and biographical detail, acknowledging that; "Forsyth has researched broadly and made connections relevant to the creative process. In addition, she collects a solid list of key critics in the field of fairy-tale and folklore studies; however, Forsyth’s treatment and interpretation of the ideas of these critics varies in its success."[13]

Academics Fletcher, Driscoll and Wilkins, in defining Australian popular fiction and fantasy note that while Forsyth identifies as an Australian author descended from Australia’s first published children’s writer Charlotte Waring Atkinson,[28] she is writing for a global readership, and only one of her 40 books is set in Australia.[29]

Edward James in the Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature remarks on the domination in the first decade of the 21st century of the popular fantasy genre by Australian women,[30] and Tierney includes Kate Forsyth amongst them, with Emily Rodda, Isobelle Carmody, Jessica Townsend, in "finding success in Australia and internationally," despite there being little distinctively 'Australian' about their works. She goes on to distinguish the recurrence of female characters in Forsyth's adult fiction "refusing to bow to societal norms" of patriarchy.[22][6]

Grimm authority Cay Dollerup[31] reviewing her historical novel The Wild Girl comments that "it is a tribute to the fundamental and inherent truths of the Grimm Tales that Kate Forsyth can, over a span of nearly 200 years, write a fascinating, humorous and also shocking novel based on their lives. It is loyal to is characters and communicates the concerns, the hopes, and fears of Germans during and after the Napoleon's wars in modern terms."[32]

Awards Edit

Forsyth's work has won numerous Aurealis Awards: she won both the Aurealis and the William Atheling Jr. Award for The Rebirth of Rapunzel, and was given an honourable mention at the 2013 Norma K. Hemming Awards for Bitter Greens, for which she also won the American Library Association Award for Best Historical Novel[26]

Works Edit

Fiction Edit

The Witches of Eileanan series Edit

  • Dragonclaw (1997) - released as The Witches of Eileanan in the US.
  • The Pool of Two Moons (1998)
  • The Cursed Towers (1999)[33]
  • The Forbidden Land (2000)
  • The Skull of the World (2001)
  • The Fathomless Caves (2002)

Rhiannon's Ride series Edit

  • The Tower of Ravens (2004)
  • The Shining City (2005)
  • The Heart of Stars (2006)

The Chain of Charms series (for 9-18-year olds) Edit

  • The Gypsy Crown (2006)
  • The Silver Horse (2006)
  • The Herb of Grace (2007)
  • The Cat's Eye Shell (2007)
  • The Lightning Bolt (2007)
  • The Butterfly in Amber (2007)

Ben and Tim's Magical Misadventures (for young readers) Edit

  • Dragon Gold (2005)
  • Wishing For Trouble (2006)
  • Sea Magic (2008)

The Impossible Quest series Edit

  • Escape from Wolfhaven Castle (2014)
  • The Wolves of the Witchwood (2015)
  • The Beast of Blackmoor Bog (2015)
  • The Drowned Kingdom (2015)
  • Battle of The Heroes (2015)

The Chronicles of Estelliana Edit

  • The Starthorn Tree (2002)
  • The Wildkin's Curse (2010)
  • The Starkin Crown (May 2011)

Other children's and young adult books Edit

  • Forsyth, Kate (2013). The puzzle ring. Chippendale: Pan Australia. ISBN 978-1-74198-485-9. OCLC 870444383.
  • Forsyth, Kate; Carrington, Lorena (2019). Vasilisa the wise: & other tales of brave young women. Kane Miller, a division of EDC. ISBN 978-1-61067-852-0. OCLC 1163936693.[34][35]
  • Forsyth, Kate; Brennan, Krista (2019). Once. Wombat Books. ISBN 978-1-925563-56-6. OCLC 1077702393.
  • Forsyth, Kate; Carrington, Lorena (2019). The buried moon: & other tales of bright young women. Serenity Press. ISBN 978-0-6484000-0-4. OCLC 1089610230.
  • Forsyth, Kate; Carrington, Lorena; Carmody, Isobelle (2020). Snow White Rose Red & other tales of kind young women. Serenity Press. ISBN 978-0-6486984-2-5. OCLC 1182876734.
  • Forsyth, Kate; Carrington, Lorena (2021). The Gardener's Son and the Golden Bird: And other Tales of Gentle Young Men. Waikiki, WA: Serenity Press. ISBN 978-0-6450996-3-8. OCLC 1263749427.

Contemporary fiction Edit

  • Full Fathom Five - as Kate Humphrey (2003), a retelling of The Little Mermaid set in modern-day Australia
  • Dancing on Knives (2014) revised version of Full Fathom Five - as Kate Forsyth

Historical fiction Edit

Other adults' books Edit

  • The Silver Well (2017) - short stories collection with Kim Wilkins

Short stories Edit

  • Love, Pain & Self-Will (1994) - as Kate Humphrey
  • The Boy from the Monster Forest (1998)
  • Morgan of the Fay (2002)
  • The Key (2008)
  • Count Stoneheart and the First Christmas Tree (2012)
  • Two Selkie stories from Scotland, Christmas Press, 2014, ISBN 978-0-9922838-7-2, OCLC 903073107[38]
  • Tales of the Sidhe (2015), two tales later re-published in the collections Vasilisa the Wise and The Buried Moon

Non fiction Edit

  • The Rebirth of Rapunzel: A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower (2016)[14]
  • Searching for Charlotte (2020) - with her sister Belinda Murrell, a bibliomemoir about their ancestor Charlotte Waring Atkinson

Poetry Edit

  • Moths (1993)
  • The Knowledge of Angels (1996)
  • Night Vigil (1998) - as Kate Humphrey
  • Siren Soul (1998) - as Kate Humphrey
  • Falling from Grace (2000) - as Kate Humphrey
  • I See My Life (2000) - as Kate Humphrey
  • Midnight Garden (2000) - as Kate Humphrey
  • World Lurches (2000) - as Kate Humphrey
  • Mythologies (2004)
  • Radiance (2004)

Essays Edit

  • Heroic Fantasy (1998)
  • Fantasy Book Reviews (Aurealis, #33-35) (2004)
  • Cecilia Dart-Thornton and The Crowthistle Chronicles (2008)
  • Fantasy News (Aurealis #40) (2008)
  • Alison Croggon and The Books of Pellinor (2008)
  • The Forgotten Fairy Tale Tellers (2013)
  • Introduction to The Year of Ancient Ghosts (2013)
  • Thirteen Things I Love About Kim Wilkins (2013)

References Edit

  1. ^ Kate Forsyth & Belinda Murrell, Searching for Charlotte, NLA publishing, 2020, p 125, 157.
  2. ^ Raddeker, Helene Bowen (November 2009). "Eco/feminism and history in fantasy writing by women". Outskirts: Feminisms Along the Edge. 21.
  3. ^ Morris, Linda (9 June 2012). "Frontier women".
  4. ^ Literary families: sisters and writers Belinda Murrell and Kate Forsyth
  5. ^ a b Kembrey, Melanie (31 August 2019). "Lunch with Kate Forsyth". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 4.
  6. ^ a b Kavanagh, Bev (February 2012). "Feminism and fairytales". Bookseller + Publisher Magazine. 91 (7): 39.
  7. ^ "Kate Forsyth (Humphrey, 1984) - Abbotsleigh". www.abbotsleigh.nsw.edu.au. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  8. ^ "Kate Forsyth has a doctorate in fairytales". ABC Radio. 7 September 2017. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  9. ^ Masson, Sophie (2016). "Breaking the pattern: Established writers undertaking creative writing doctorates in Australia". TEXT. 20 (2): 1–8. doi:10.52086/001c.25318.
  10. ^ "Kate Forsyth | HNSA". Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  11. ^ "Kate Forsyth. Giving Fairy Tales a Whole New Meaning". Strange Alliances. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  12. ^ a b Obeso, Dionne (January 2017). "Bitter Greens (review)". Renaissance Magazine. 21 (2): 72.
  13. ^ a b Mullins, Melissa (May 2017). "Reviewed Work: The Rebirth of Rapunzel: A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower by Kate Forsyth". Marvels & Tales. Wayne State University Press. 31 (1 : Transcultural and Intermedial Fairy Tales and Television): 188–190. doi:10.13110/marvelstales.31.1.0188.
  14. ^ a b c Calderone, Belinda (2017). "Respelling the world". TEXT. 21 (43 : special): 1–3. doi:10.52086/001c.25890.
  15. ^ Ringland, Holly (November 2015). "Daydream or Perish". Good Reading: 16–17.
  16. ^ Kroenert, Tim (2014). "Where tourism and writing meet". Writing Queensland. 245: 6–7.
  17. ^ Graham, Paul (2018). "The 112th annual conference of the Dickens Fellowship: Sydney, New South Wales, 25 – 30 October 2018". The Dickensian. 114 (506): 328.
  18. ^ "Reviews". Education: Journal of the N.S.W. Public School Teachers Federation. 95 (7): 29. 4 August 2014.
  19. ^ "High profile writers for School Days festival". Education: Journal of the N.S.W. Public School Teachers Federation. 83 (5): 19. 13 May 2002.
  20. ^ "Appendix 6 : Conferences, forums, seminars and lectures conducted by the National Museum of Australia". National Museum of Australia Annual Report 05-06. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service: 168. 2006. ISSN 0818-7142.
  21. ^ Wilkins, Kim (2017). "Writing Time: Coleridge, Creativity, and Commerce". TEXT. 21 (41 : Special issue): 1–13. doi:10.52086/001c.25940.
  22. ^ a b Tierney, Caylee (2020). "An intricate web: Unweaving strands of convention in children's fantasy series by Australians". Australian Humanities Review. 66 (1).
  23. ^ Adelaide, Debra (2015). The simple act of reading. Random House Australia. ISBN 978-0-85798-624-5. OCLC 1099719742.
  24. ^ Tiffany, C. (June 2015). "The simple act of reading". Good Reading: 51–53.
  25. ^ Austlit. "Kate Forsyth | AustLit: Discover Australian Stories". www.austlit.edu.au. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  26. ^ a b Do Rozario, Rebecca-Anne; Sulway, Nike; Calderone, Belinda (2017). "Introduction: The state of play in Australian fairy tale: Where to now?". TEXT: Journal of Writing and Writing Courses: 1–5.
  27. ^ "Fairy tales, history and collaboration: an interview with Kate Forsyth". Feathers of the Firebird. 22 January 2018. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  28. ^ Searching for Charlotte: the fascinating story of Australia's first children's author, 2021, ISBN 978-1-78782-751-6, OCLC 1277198591, retrieved 25 May 2022
  29. ^ Fletcher, Lisa; Driscoll, Beth; Wilkins, Kim (2018). "What is Australian Popular Fiction?". Australian Literary Studies. 33 (4): 1–11.
  30. ^ James, Edward (2012). "Tolkien, Lewis and the explosion of genre fantasy". Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature.: 62–78. doi:10.1017/CCOL9780521429597.007. ISBN 9780521429597. OCLC 939605860.
  31. ^ Dollerup, Cay (1999). Tales and translation the Grimm Tales from pan-Germanic narratives to shared international fairytales. John Benjamins. ISBN 978-90-272-1635-9. OCLC 237352200.
  32. ^ a b Dollerup, Cay (March 2013). "Grimm Tales". American Book Review. 35 (3): 11. doi:10.1353/abr.2014.0054. S2CID 201761449.
  33. ^ Webb, Janeen (March 2000). "A Literary Foment: Australian SF Now". Science Fiction Studies. 27 (1, Part 2): 114–118.
  34. ^ Boyes, Melissa (30 March 2020). Folklore in Contemporary Australian Literature: Baba Yaga as guardian and mentor in antipodean narratives. (Doctoral thesis). Charles Sturt University.
  35. ^ Hartley-Kroeger, F. (2019). "Vasilisa the Wise and Other Tales of Brave Young Women by Kate Forsyth (review)". Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books. 72 (8): 343–344. doi:10.1353/bcc.2019.0256. S2CID 150911989.
  36. ^ layeredpages (2 October 2014). "Interview with Author Kate Forsyth". Layered Pages. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
  37. ^ Kohlke, Marie-Luise; Ho, Elizabeth; Gruss, Susanne; Boehm-Schnitker, Nadine (1 September 2013). "Announcements: CFPs, conference notices, & current & forthcoming projects and publications of interest to neo-Victorian scholars". Rivista di Studi Vittoriani (Journal of Victorian Studies). 6 (2): 223–247.
  38. ^ Stephens, John (2015). "Affective Strategies, Emotion Schemas, and Empathic Endings: Selkie Girls and a Critical Odyssey". Papers: Explorations into Children's Literature. 23 (1): 17–33. doi:10.21153/pecl2015vol23no1art1122. S2CID 246327231.

External links Edit

  • Kate Forsyth Official Site

kate, forsyth, tower, ravens, redirects, here, confused, with, raven, tower, leckie, born, june, 1966, australian, author, best, known, historical, novel, bitter, greens, which, interweaves, retelling, rapunzel, fairy, tale, with, true, life, story, woman, fir. The Tower of Ravens redirects here Not to be confused with The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie Kate Forsyth born 3 June 1966 is an Australian author She is best known for her historical novel Bitter Greens which interweaves a retelling of the Rapunzel fairy tale with the true life story of the woman who first told the tale the 17th century French writer Charlotte Rose de Caumont de La Force Kate ForsythKate Forsyth in 2007 BornKatherine Emma Humphrey 1 1966 06 03 3 June 1966 age 57 Sydney AustraliaOccupationWriterpoetjournalistNationalityAustralianGenreHistorical fictionchildren s literaturefantasyWebsitewww wbr kateforsyth wbr com wbr auForsyth is also the author of several children s books including The Gypsy Crown The Puzzle Ring The Starthorn Tree The Wildkin s Curse The Starkin Crown and Dragon Gold She has also published two heroic fantasy series The Witches of Eileanan 2 and Rhiannon s Ride the poetry collection Radiance and the novel Full Fathom Five under her maiden name Kate Humphrey She is a five time Aurealis Award winner 3 She is married with three children and lives in Sydney New South Wales She is also a direct descendant of Charlotte Barton the author of Australia s earliest known children s book Forsyth s older sister Belinda Murrell is also an author for children and young adults and their younger brother Nick Humphrey is a nonfiction author 4 Contents 1 Journalism 2 Author 3 Reception 4 Awards 5 Works 5 1 Fiction 5 1 1 The Witches of Eileanan series 5 1 2 Rhiannon s Ride series 5 1 3 The Chain of Charms series for 9 18 year olds 5 1 4 Ben and Tim s Magical Misadventures for young readers 5 1 5 The Impossible Quest series 5 1 6 The Chronicles of Estelliana 5 1 7 Other children s and young adult books 5 1 8 Contemporary fiction 5 1 9 Historical fiction 5 1 10 Other adults books 5 1 11 Short stories 5 2 Non fiction 5 3 Poetry 5 4 Essays 6 References 7 External linksJournalism EditThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Kate Forsyth news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message After graduating in a Bachelor of Arts in Literature from Macquarie University Forsyth worked as a full time journalist including Editor of Hair and deputy editor of Money Watch before quitting to work freelance writing articles for Vogue Australia Black White Studio Bambini Mode Brides Interiors and Australian Collections amongst others Freelancing allowed her to concentrate more on her poetry and to be President of the Poets Union She publishes her poetry under her maiden name Kate Humphrey This has appeared in Australian newspapers such as The Sydney Morning Herald The Age and The Bulletin and domestic and international literary magazines Author EditWriting in The Sydney Morning Herald Melanie Kembrey rates Forsyth as an internationally acclaimed author best known for her re imaginings of fairy stories from a feminist perspective 5 6 Forsyth wrote Full Fathom Five as the thesis for her Master of Arts in Writing and then to relieve the tedium of studying theorists such as Lacan Derrida and de Saussure for her exams she started reading a multi book fantasy series The turning point was when her husband Greg Forsyth suggested that she write such a series herself citation needed Forsyth undertook a doctorate in fairy tale retelling at the University of Technology Sydney 7 8 9 Her novel Bitter Greens was written as the creative component of her doctorate 10 11 which one reviewer felt resulted in a story that was two books 12 and subsequently Forsyth examined the many different retellings of Rapunzel in The Rebirth of Rapunzel A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower 13 which reviewer Belinda Calderone considers remarkably clear when Forsyth is dealing with such a wide ranging time period and simultaneously presenting three kinds of writing 14 Forsyth is active in presenting workshops for writers 15 16 and is a frequently a public speaker 17 often in schools 18 and also in literary festivals and conferences 19 bookshops libraries and museums 20 21 on fantasy folk tales and the role of women in them 22 With Joan London Andy Griffiths and David Malouf she contributed to The Simple Act of Reading a compilation of essays and memoir pieces detailing the way reading has guided these writers 23 24 Forsyth is a generous mentor for and collaborator with other writers and creatives including co author Kim Wilkins and illustrator Kathleen Jennings for The Silver Well which won the 2017 Aurealis Award for Best Collection Sarah Mills with whom she presented the combination cooking and book review show Word of Mouth TV artist Lorena Carrington 25 26 with whom she partnered on Vasilisa the Wise and Other Tales of Brave Young Women in 2019 and others in their series of illustrated feminist fairy tales since 5 27 and with sister Belinda Murrell for joint research on their Searching for Charlotte Reception EditOf her The Rebirth of Rapunzel A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower 14 Melissa Mullins writes that Forsyth weaves together the strands of personal narrative creative process and historical and biographical detail acknowledging that Forsyth has researched broadly and made connections relevant to the creative process In addition she collects a solid list of key critics in the field of fairy tale and folklore studies however Forsyth s treatment and interpretation of the ideas of these critics varies in its success 13 Academics Fletcher Driscoll and Wilkins in defining Australian popular fiction and fantasy note that while Forsyth identifies as an Australian author descended from Australia s first published children s writer Charlotte Waring Atkinson 28 she is writing for a global readership and only one of her 40 books is set in Australia 29 Edward James in the Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature remarks on the domination in the first decade of the 21st century of the popular fantasy genre by Australian women 30 and Tierney includes Kate Forsyth amongst them with Emily Rodda Isobelle Carmody Jessica Townsend in finding success in Australia and internationally despite there being little distinctively Australian about their works She goes on to distinguish the recurrence of female characters in Forsyth s adult fiction refusing to bow to societal norms of patriarchy 22 6 Grimm authority Cay Dollerup 31 reviewing her historical novel The Wild Girl comments that it is a tribute to the fundamental and inherent truths of the Grimm Tales that Kate Forsyth can over a span of nearly 200 years write a fascinating humorous and also shocking novel based on their lives It is loyal to is characters and communicates the concerns the hopes and fears of Germans during and after the Napoleon s wars in modern terms 32 Awards EditForsyth s work has won numerous Aurealis Awards she won both the Aurealis and the William Atheling Jr Award for The Rebirth of Rapunzel and was given an honourable mention at the 2013 Norma K Hemming Awards for Bitter Greens for which she also won the American Library Association Award for Best Historical Novel 26 Works EditFiction Edit The Witches of Eileanan series Edit Dragonclaw 1997 released as The Witches of Eileanan in the US The Pool of Two Moons 1998 The Cursed Towers 1999 33 The Forbidden Land 2000 The Skull of the World 2001 The Fathomless Caves 2002 Rhiannon s Ride series Edit The Tower of Ravens 2004 The Shining City 2005 The Heart of Stars 2006 The Chain of Charms series for 9 18 year olds Edit The Gypsy Crown 2006 The Silver Horse 2006 The Herb of Grace 2007 The Cat s Eye Shell 2007 The Lightning Bolt 2007 The Butterfly in Amber 2007 Ben and Tim s Magical Misadventures for young readers Edit Dragon Gold 2005 Wishing For Trouble 2006 Sea Magic 2008 The Impossible Quest series Edit Escape from Wolfhaven Castle 2014 The Wolves of the Witchwood 2015 The Beast of Blackmoor Bog 2015 The Drowned Kingdom 2015 Battle of The Heroes 2015 The Chronicles of Estelliana Edit The Starthorn Tree 2002 The Wildkin s Curse 2010 The Starkin Crown May 2011 Other children s and young adult books Edit Forsyth Kate 2013 The puzzle ring Chippendale Pan Australia ISBN 978 1 74198 485 9 OCLC 870444383 Forsyth Kate Carrington Lorena 2019 Vasilisa the wise amp other tales of brave young women Kane Miller a division of EDC ISBN 978 1 61067 852 0 OCLC 1163936693 34 35 Forsyth Kate Brennan Krista 2019 Once Wombat Books ISBN 978 1 925563 56 6 OCLC 1077702393 Forsyth Kate Carrington Lorena 2019 The buried moon amp other tales of bright young women Serenity Press ISBN 978 0 6484000 0 4 OCLC 1089610230 Forsyth Kate Carrington Lorena Carmody Isobelle 2020 Snow White Rose Red amp other tales of kind young women Serenity Press ISBN 978 0 6486984 2 5 OCLC 1182876734 Forsyth Kate Carrington Lorena 2021 The Gardener s Son and the Golden Bird And other Tales of Gentle Young Men Waikiki WA Serenity Press ISBN 978 0 6450996 3 8 OCLC 1263749427 Contemporary fiction Edit Full Fathom Five as Kate Humphrey 2003 a retelling of The Little Mermaid set in modern day Australia Dancing on Knives 2014 revised version of Full Fathom Five as Kate ForsythHistorical fiction Edit Bitter Greens 2012 a retelling of Rapunzel set in Renaissance Venice and fictionalised biography of Charlotte Rose de Caumont de La Force 36 12 The Wild Girl March 2013 a retelling of All Kinds of Fur based on the life of Wilhelm Grimm s wife Dortchen Wild 37 32 The Beast s Garden August 2015 a retelling of The Singing Springing Lark set in Nazi Germany Beauty in Thorns July 2017 a retelling of Sleeping Beauty and a fictionalised account of the history of the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood The Blue Rose July 2019 a retelling of the tale The Blue Rose set in Revolutionary France and Imperial China The Crimson Thread 2022 a retelling of the Minotaur s myth set in World War II GreeceOther adults books Edit The Silver Well 2017 short stories collection with Kim WilkinsShort stories Edit Love Pain amp Self Will 1994 as Kate Humphrey The Boy from the Monster Forest 1998 Morgan of the Fay 2002 The Key 2008 Count Stoneheart and the First Christmas Tree 2012 Two Selkie stories from Scotland Christmas Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 9922838 7 2 OCLC 903073107 38 Tales of the Sidhe 2015 two tales later re published in the collections Vasilisa the Wise and The Buried MoonNon fiction Edit The Rebirth of Rapunzel A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower 2016 14 Searching for Charlotte 2020 with her sister Belinda Murrell a bibliomemoir about their ancestor Charlotte Waring AtkinsonPoetry Edit Moths 1993 The Knowledge of Angels 1996 Night Vigil 1998 as Kate Humphrey Siren Soul 1998 as Kate Humphrey Falling from Grace 2000 as Kate Humphrey I See My Life 2000 as Kate Humphrey Midnight Garden 2000 as Kate Humphrey World Lurches 2000 as Kate Humphrey Mythologies 2004 Radiance 2004 Essays Edit Heroic Fantasy 1998 Fantasy Book Reviews Aurealis 33 35 2004 Cecilia Dart Thornton and The Crowthistle Chronicles 2008 Fantasy News Aurealis 40 2008 Alison Croggon and The Books of Pellinor 2008 The Forgotten Fairy Tale Tellers 2013 Introduction to The Year of Ancient Ghosts 2013 Thirteen Things I Love About Kim Wilkins 2013 References Edit Kate Forsyth amp Belinda Murrell Searching for Charlotte NLA publishing 2020 p 125 157 Raddeker Helene Bowen November 2009 Eco feminism and history in fantasy writing by women Outskirts Feminisms Along the Edge 21 Morris Linda 9 June 2012 Frontier women Literary families sisters and writers Belinda Murrell and Kate Forsyth a b Kembrey Melanie 31 August 2019 Lunch with Kate Forsyth The Sydney Morning Herald p 4 a b Kavanagh Bev February 2012 Feminism and fairytales Bookseller Publisher Magazine 91 7 39 Kate Forsyth Humphrey 1984 Abbotsleigh www abbotsleigh nsw edu au Retrieved 24 May 2022 Kate Forsyth has a doctorate in fairytales ABC Radio 7 September 2017 Retrieved 24 May 2022 Masson Sophie 2016 Breaking the pattern Established writers undertaking creative writing doctorates in Australia TEXT 20 2 1 8 doi 10 52086 001c 25318 Kate Forsyth HNSA Retrieved 24 May 2022 Kate Forsyth Giving Fairy Tales a Whole New Meaning Strange Alliances 13 August 2013 Retrieved 25 May 2022 a b Obeso Dionne January 2017 Bitter Greens review Renaissance Magazine 21 2 72 a b Mullins Melissa May 2017 Reviewed Work The Rebirth of Rapunzel A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower by Kate Forsyth Marvels amp Tales Wayne State University Press 31 1 Transcultural and Intermedial Fairy Tales and Television 188 190 doi 10 13110 marvelstales 31 1 0188 a b c Calderone Belinda 2017 Respelling the world TEXT 21 43 special 1 3 doi 10 52086 001c 25890 Ringland Holly November 2015 Daydream or Perish Good Reading 16 17 Kroenert Tim 2014 Where tourism and writing meet Writing Queensland 245 6 7 Graham Paul 2018 The 112th annual conference of the Dickens Fellowship Sydney New South Wales 25 30 October 2018 The Dickensian 114 506 328 Reviews Education Journal of the N S W Public School Teachers Federation 95 7 29 4 August 2014 High profile writers for School Days festival Education Journal of the N S W Public School Teachers Federation 83 5 19 13 May 2002 Appendix 6 Conferences forums seminars and lectures conducted by the National Museum of Australia National Museum of Australia Annual Report 05 06 Canberra Australian Government Publishing Service 168 2006 ISSN 0818 7142 Wilkins Kim 2017 Writing Time Coleridge Creativity and Commerce TEXT 21 41 Special issue 1 13 doi 10 52086 001c 25940 a b Tierney Caylee 2020 An intricate web Unweaving strands of convention in children s fantasy series by Australians Australian Humanities Review 66 1 Adelaide Debra 2015 The simple act of reading Random House Australia ISBN 978 0 85798 624 5 OCLC 1099719742 Tiffany C June 2015 The simple act of reading Good Reading 51 53 Austlit Kate Forsyth AustLit Discover Australian Stories www austlit edu au Retrieved 25 May 2022 a b Do Rozario Rebecca Anne Sulway Nike Calderone Belinda 2017 Introduction The state of play in Australian fairy tale Where to now TEXT Journal of Writing and Writing Courses 1 5 Fairy tales history and collaboration an interview with Kate Forsyth Feathers of the Firebird 22 January 2018 Retrieved 25 May 2022 Searching for Charlotte the fascinating story of Australia s first children s author 2021 ISBN 978 1 78782 751 6 OCLC 1277198591 retrieved 25 May 2022 Fletcher Lisa Driscoll Beth Wilkins Kim 2018 What is Australian Popular Fiction Australian Literary Studies 33 4 1 11 James Edward 2012 Tolkien Lewis and the explosion of genre fantasy Cambridge Companion to Fantasy Literature 62 78 doi 10 1017 CCOL9780521429597 007 ISBN 9780521429597 OCLC 939605860 Dollerup Cay 1999 Tales and translation the Grimm Tales from pan Germanic narratives to shared international fairytales John Benjamins ISBN 978 90 272 1635 9 OCLC 237352200 a b Dollerup Cay March 2013 Grimm Tales American Book Review 35 3 11 doi 10 1353 abr 2014 0054 S2CID 201761449 Webb Janeen March 2000 A Literary Foment Australian SF Now Science Fiction Studies 27 1 Part 2 114 118 Boyes Melissa 30 March 2020 Folklore in Contemporary Australian Literature Baba Yaga as guardian and mentor in antipodean narratives Doctoral thesis Charles Sturt University Hartley Kroeger F 2019 Vasilisa the Wise and Other Tales of Brave Young Women by Kate Forsyth review Bulletin of the Center for Children s Books 72 8 343 344 doi 10 1353 bcc 2019 0256 S2CID 150911989 layeredpages 2 October 2014 Interview with Author Kate Forsyth Layered Pages Retrieved 25 May 2022 Kohlke Marie Luise Ho Elizabeth Gruss Susanne Boehm Schnitker Nadine 1 September 2013 Announcements CFPs conference notices amp current amp forthcoming projects and publications of interest to neo Victorian scholars Rivista di Studi Vittoriani Journal of Victorian Studies 6 2 223 247 Stephens John 2015 Affective Strategies Emotion Schemas and Empathic Endings Selkie Girls and a Critical Odyssey Papers Explorations into Children s Literature 23 1 17 33 doi 10 21153 pecl2015vol23no1art1122 S2CID 246327231 External links Edit nbsp Children s literature portalKate Forsyth Official Site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kate Forsyth amp oldid 1179588461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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