
Pat Lowe
Author of The Girl With No Name
About the Author
Pat Lowe was born in England. At the age of eleven she went to boarding school, where she suffered from chilblains and dreamed of migrating to Australia. After working as a postwoman and then spending three years as a secondary school teacher in East Africa, Pat studied psychology. In 1972 she show more sailed into Fremantle on a Russian ship, and became an Australian citizen as soon as she was eligible. Pat worked as a psychologist in a children's home and later in Western Australian prisons. Desert Dog won the 1998 Western Australian Premier's Children's Book Award and was a Children's Book Council of Australia Notable Book. Many of the characters in Feeling the Heat first appeared as younger characters in The Girl With No Name, published by Penguin in 1994. The Girl With No Name was shortlisted for the Multicultural Children's Literature Award and has been published in Italian. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Works by Pat Lowe
It's my body 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- psychologist
teacher
postal worker - Relationships
- Pike, Jimmy (partner)
- Nationality
- Australia
- Places of residence
- Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia
Broome, Western Australia, Australia - Associated Place (for map)
- Western Australia, Australia
Members
Reviews
Story opens with 19 year old Matthew finally returning to the remote Kimberley town he left when he was about 13. He hopes to catch up with Frances, an aboriginal girl he grew up with and fell in love with and recapture the friendship they once had. But Matthew's view of the Kimberley through the rose-coloured glasses of childhood is soon shattered - Frances is pregnant to a married man, a lot of the places he visited as a child are spoilt by rubbish or restrictions and employment is very show more hard to come by. Things are further complicated when Matthew, discovering Frances' pregnancy, goes wandering through the town late at night; drowning his sorrows with a recently divorced man from Perth called Jeff. Their drinking takes them to a run-down jetty and while sitting there talking about their problems, Jeff decides to go for a swim. Before Matthew can warn him of the dangers of crocodiles, there is a huge splash, a scream and then Jeff has disappeared into the dark tidal waters. Will Matthew find him or will he be accused of murderering his new friend? And what of Frances and the new baby - will Matthew be able to be a "father" in the aboriginal community despite the fact that he is white? A different, sometimes confronting look at outback Australian towns and the differences between the aboriginal and white cultures of Australia.
p.43 - 49 Matthew goes for an interview as a station hand and discovers he is hired on the spot. Unfortunately, he has helped the owner Wainwright collect a car from the mechanics in town, and he is now stranded kilometres away with no gear so he decides to take the car he has just collected back to town, hoping no-one will think he is stealing it. show less
p.43 - 49 Matthew goes for an interview as a station hand and discovers he is hired on the spot. Unfortunately, he has helped the owner Wainwright collect a car from the mechanics in town, and he is now stranded kilometres away with no gear so he decides to take the car he has just collected back to town, hoping no-one will think he is stealing it. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 16
- Members
- 140
- Popularity
- #146,472
- Rating
- 3.0
- Reviews
- 1
- ISBNs
- 35
- Languages
- 1



