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Vashti Farrer Biography

Personal, Addresses, Career, Member, Honors Awards, Writings, Sidelights



Education: M.A. (English literature). Hobbies and other interests: Acting, watching plays and films, attending concerts, reading. Has lived with assorted pets, including a rat, possums, and axolotls.

Addresses

Agent—c/o Author Mail, Scholastic Australia, P.O. Box 579, Gosford, New South Wales 2250, Australia.

Career

Writer. Has worked as an advertising copywriter, book reviewer and film extra; Mitchell Library, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, research librarian; teacher of creative writing.

Member

New South Wales Military Historical Society (vice president).

Honors Awards

Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year: Early Childhood shortlist, 2005, for Mr Noah and the Cats.

Writings

All in Together, illustrated by Patricia Mullins, Angus & Robertson (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia), 1974.

Tales of the Dreamtime, illustrated by Walter Cunningham, Angus & Robertson (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia), 1975.

Vashti Farrer

Escape to Eaglehawk, Millennium Books (Newtown, New South Wales, Australia), 1991.

Eureka Gold, Millennium Books (Newtown, New South Wales, Australia), 1993.

Ned's Kang-U-Roo, illustrations by John Nicholson, Lothian Books (Port Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 1997.

Princess Euphorbia (also see below), illustrated by Nan Bodsworth, Addison Wesley Longman (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 1997, Sundance (Littleton, MA), 1999, adapted as a play, illustrated by Betina Ogden, Pearson Education (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2001.



Molly O'Malley and the Magpies, illustrated by Margaret Power, Macmillan Educational (South Yarra, Victoria, Australia), 1998.

Plagues and Federation; The Diary of Kitty Barnes, the Rocks, Sydney, 1901, Scholastic Australia (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia), 2000.

Walers Go to War, illustrated by Sue O'Loughlin, ANZAC Day Commemoration Committee (Aspley, Queensland, Australia), 2001.

Letters Back Home (play), illustrated by Penel Gamble, Pearson Education (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2002.

Fearsome Creatures, illustrated by Melissa Web, Pearson Education (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2002.

Lulubelle and Her Bones, illustrated by David Cox, Scholastic Press (Sydney, New South Wales, Australia), 2003.

Mr Noah and the Cats, illustrated by Neil Curtis, Lothian (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2004.

Atlanta: The Fastest Runner in the World, Pearson Education (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2004.

Breakfast with Buddha, illustrated by Gaye Chapman, Scholastic Press (Gosford, New South Wales, Australia), 2005.

(With Mary Small) Feathered Soldiers, illustrated by Elizabeth Alger, ANZAC Day Commemoration Committee (Aspley, Queensland, Australia), 2005.

Big Feet, Very Sweet, illustrated by Neil Curtis, Lothian (South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia), 2006.

Sidelights

Australian writer Vashti Farrer writes for both children and older readers. In addition to short fiction for adults, she draws on her interest in Australian history in books such as Escape to Eaglehawk, Plagues and Federation: The Diary of Kitty Barnes, and Feathered Soldiers, the last a tribute to the messenger pigeons that aided the Australian forces during World War II that was coauthored with Mary Small. A former librarian who has also studied ancient history, English literature, and archeology, Farrer is an active member of the New South Wales Military Historical Society.

In Breakfast with Buddha Farrer presents young readers with a worthwhile lesson about patience, and uses her favorite animal to teach it. When Sati the cat suddenly finds herself homeless after a giant flood, she makes her way to a nearby monastery, hoping to find shelter. While Sati is happily taken in by the monks, she suddenly realizes that her life as top cat has ended; in the monastery she is only one among many cats that have been adopted. With the guidance and patience of a caring monk, Sati learns to overcome her natural pride. Farrer's picture book, with its ties to Buddhism, presents readers with a "window into a culture rarely shown" and provides a positive "model of conflict resolution," according to Robin Morrow in Australian Bookseller and Publisher.

Farrer retells the biblical tale of Noah and the ark with a pro-feline spin in the 2004 picture book Mr Noah and the Cats. (Illustration by Neil Curtis.)

Cats also star in Farrer's Mr Noah and the Cats, an updated rendition of the Biblical story about Noah and the Ark. In her interpretation of the traditional story, Farrer focuses on desert cats Urshanabi and Nishaba, who stow away on the Ark. When their meowing gives them away, the two felines become favored seafaring companions.

Biographical and Critical Sources

PERIODICALS

Australian Bookseller and Publisher, August, 2005, Robin Morrow, review of Breakfast with Buddha.

Magpies, September, 1997, review of Ned's Kang-U-Roo, p. 37; September, 2000, review of Plagues and Federation, p. 34; September, 2003, review of Lulubelle and Her Bones, p. 34; September, 2005, Russ Merrin, review of Big Feet, Very Sweet, p. 31.

ONLINE

Aussie Reviews Online, http://www.aussiereviews.com/ (September 26, 2005), Sally Murphy, review of Lulubelle and Her Bones.

Lateral Learning Speakers' Agency Web site, http://www.laterallearning.com/ (September 26, 2005), "Vashti Farrer."

Vashti Farrer Home Page, http://www.vashtifarrer.com (December 19, 2005).

Additional topics

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