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No Time for Pity and Other Tales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 226

No Time for Pity and Other Tales

From more than 150 short stories produced during four decades of professional writing, Barbara has picked twenty that show a variety of themes, from humour to tragedy, love to hate, revealing a wide range of human emotions and yearnings, and the highs and lows that make humanity such a fascinating study. The opening story, No Time for Pity, is a new look at an old crime: the murders of two young princes in the Tower of London, 1483. Australians are all too aware of the theme of Beached Spirit - the unwelcome arrival of beached whales. For light relief, The Cornish Pot introduces a real fairy, and in Whatever Happened to Love? the eccentricities of the aristocracy meet head-on with the end re...

The Boy from the Hulks
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 265

The Boy from the Hulks

Lemuel, sixteen when he is sentenced to be transported to the other side of the world, maintains his innocence, but no one believes him. Following the voyage on a hell ship, where the gaoler Bulstrode makes life almost impossible, and Lemuels companion, Collie Barnes, fails to complete the journey, his luck changes and he becomes a clerk to Mr Larkville. But he never forgets his oath to defeat the greedy Bulstrode. When his brothers, Tim and Percy, join him, new hazards arise, and with exploration, challenges from corrupt soldiers and the constant struggle to survive, Lemuels life is full. But there are moments of delight to raise his spirits.

Ripple in the Reeds
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 280

Ripple in the Reeds

Jeanne-Marie marries a German officer against her parents' wishes and finds herself embroiled in the passions and tragedies of wartime Europe. Eventually arriving in Australia, she makes a new life for herself - until the past catches up with her. It falls to Margaret, her young colleague, to unravel the final mysteries. Books by Barbara Yates Rothwell Dutch Point (The Lagoon Press: 1998): More than 3 centuries of W. Australian history mingle with the fortunes of the Burleigh family - shipwreck, murder and suspense combine to create a vivid picture of the developing life of a colony founded in 1829. Coulter Valley (Trafford Publishing in cooperation with The Lagoon Press: 2004): Tom resolves...

Klara
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 486

Klara

When the Nazis come to power, KLARA HOFFMAN is just past 30, daughter of a well-to-do Jewish cloth manufacturer. Heinrich, her fiance, becomes a Nazi, and she breaks off their engagement. Jacob, her young brother, dies from a beating by a Nazi official, and on November 12, 1938 her father, Ernst, dies following the violence of the "Night of Broken Glass". Klara's brother Erik and her sisters have already left for the Americas. But Klara is sponsored by an English family, the Furlongs. She has to leave her mother, who eventually dies in the Auschwitz death camp. In England, Klara watches as war draws nearer. She strikes up a lasting friendship with Eleanor, the Furlongs' 10-year-old daughter,...

Standfast and Other Tales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 228

Standfast and Other Tales

This collection, and its companion piece, No Time for Pity and Other Tales, covers wide-ranging motifs: humour, crime, fantasy, family, and childhood themes. Several stories are located in the outback areas much loved, but seldom visited, by Australians-they are often regarded as the "real Australia," where men are men...etc. But there are humorous tales too, though readers should remember that one man's funny story is another man's blank stare. Then there are ghosts, but not of the sheet-flapping variety; and slices of life seen through the eyes of children. Where would story writers be without crime? What happened in "Townhouse" to create the cold chill? Why was that young man shooting like a maniac on the rifle range in "Come to the Fair?" And what is the dark secret in "Fruition?" In a lighter vein is "In Memoriam"-would you have handled Margot's problem with such grace? And there is unfulfilled yearning in "The True Romantic" and "Waiting." All that is needed now is a comfortable chair, a warm fire and a glass of something cheering, or perhaps plenty of sunscreen and a shady umbrella on the beach, and these stories wait to help you pass an enjoyable hour or so.

AN EMPTY BOTTLE and Other Tales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 207

AN EMPTY BOTTLE and Other Tales

An Empty Bottle is a collection of short stories that would otherwise have been consigned to the realm of forgotten things. Written over many years, many published around the world and others achieving awards in Australia, they cover aspects of life and living from humour, crime, and retribution, love and hate, children and the elderly—something for just about anyone. There is even a fairy story for adults in there. This is the third collection gleaned from a busy writing life, No Time for Pity and Standfast appearing a few years ago. Barbara believes that readers still enjoy short fiction, but it is not easy to find. For the busy person, the young mum, the city girl, the elderly, and those who just don’t have a long attention span, the genre still offers a happy hour or so curled up with a book. Reading is one of life’s true enjoyments, whether it is done with an old-fashioned collection of bound paper or one of the new electronic gadgets. Long may it last!

Death at the Festival
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 154

Death at the Festival

Australia has some fine and challenging arts/music festivals. I was involved with one some years ago as a music reviewer and found this story gradually forming in my mind. Murder, of course, is never funny and needs to be treated with respect, but I am certain that those who are involved with sorting out the whys and wherefores of a crime would agree that some of the characters who get involved do have their comic side. Marius Hogbein, the festival director, is horrified when his beloved festival becomes the scene for murder. The victims are all famous, and that bodes no good for the festivals reputation. But life has to go on, and he is dealing with performers who all have their own brand of ego to be reckoned with. The detective sergeant in charge of investigation, Nicholas Henry Jarvis Verdun, has no understanding of musicthough he does try. And having to deal with temperamental musicians is outside his job description.

Coulter Valley
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 288

Coulter Valley

When Tom decides to write the history of his artistic family, he finds himself embroiled in the strange situation at Coulter Valley, the family's old home, where elderly aunts Sophie and Bernice still live. Artists Tom and Edith, young Tom's great-grandparents, raised their four children as 'a family dedicated to art', isolated from the adverse influences of the outside world, and young Tom's research gradually uncovers the results of this dedicated, rigid attitude. Will his investigations end in tragedy? Or will family soidarity triumph?

Death in Titipu
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 172

Death in Titipu

In early 2016, my book Death at the Festival was published by Trafford. It was my first entry into writing a crime novel though I have written several short stories in the genre. This is the second, Death in Titipu. Like the first, it draws on my musical training; the previous one used a classical music festival as its background. This new book brings to life a small-town performance of the famous Gilbert and Sullivan operetta The Mikado, which, as devotees will recall, takes place in the town of Titipu. Who has taken all the fun out of it by killing . . . ? But read the book, and all will be revealed. There was a time within our memory when the police had fewer aids to assist in their search for the criminal than our contemporary peace keepers have access to. This story takes place at that time.

An Empty Bottle and Other Tales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 207

An Empty Bottle and Other Tales

An Empty Bottle is a collection of short stories that would otherwise have been consigned to the realm of forgotten things. Written over many years, many published around the world and others achieving awards in Australia, they cover aspects of life and living from humour, crime, and retribution, love and hate, children and the elderly—something for just about anyone. There is even a fairy story for adults in there. This is the third collection gleaned from a busy writing life, No Time for Pity and Standfast appearing a few years ago. Barbara believes that readers still enjoy short fiction, but it is not easy to find. For the busy person, the young mum, the city girl, the elderly, and those who just don't have a long attention span, the genre still offers a happy hour or so curled up with a book. Reading is one of life's true enjoyments, whether it is done with an old-fashioned collection of bound paper or one of the new electronic gadgets. Long may it last!