Dream Big! Heroes Who Dared to Be Bold (100 People - 100 Ways to Change the World)

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Dream Big! Heroes Who Dared to Be Bold (100 People - 100 Ways to Change the World)

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Highlights

  • 208

    Pages
  • 9781407189031

    ISBN
  • 1 mm

    Width
  • 14 mm

    Height
  • 20 gram

    Weight
  • 100

    Edition
  • PAPERBACK

    Binding
  • 20 AUGUST 2019

    Publish Date

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    About the Author

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    Sally Morgan

    Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the GoodReads database with this name.

    Sally Morgan is recognised as one of Australias best known Aboriginal artists and writers. She is one of a number of successful urban Aboriginal artists.

    Sally was born in Perth in 1951, the eldest of five children. As a child she found school difficult because of questions from other students about her appearance and family background. She understood from her mother that she and her family were from India. However, when Sally was fifteen she learnt that she and her sister were in fact of Aboriginal descent, from the Palku people of the Pilbara.

    This experience of her hidden origins, and subsequent quest for identity, was the stimulus for her first book My Place published in 1987. It tells the story of her self discovery through reconnection with her Aboriginal culture and community. The book was an immediate success and has since sold over half a million copies in Australia. It has also been published in the United States, Europe and Asia.

    Her second book Wanamurraganya was published in 1989. It is the biography of her grandfather, Jack McPhee. She has also written five books for children.

    As well as writing, Sally Morgan has established an international reputation as an artist. She has works in numerous private and public collections in Australia and the United States, including the Australian National Gallery and the Dobell Foundation collection. Her work is particularly popular in the United States. Her work as an artist is excellently described and illustrated in the book Art of Sally Morgan.

    She has received many awards, including from the Human Rights and Equal Opportunities Commission. As a part of the celebration in 1993 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, her print Outback was selected by international art historians as one of 30 paintings and sculptures for reproduction on a stamp representing an article