Helen Hodgman


Helen Hodgman was an Australian novelist, who was born in Aberdeen, Scotland and migrated to Australia with her family in 1958.
She won the 1978 Somerset Maugham Award for her novel Jack and Jill. She also won the 1989 Christina Stead Fiction Prize for the novel Broken Words.

Career

On publication of her first novel, British critic Auberon Waugh, referred to her as "a born writer with a style and an elan which is all her own".
In 1983 Hodgman was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, which, by 2001 had deprived her of the ability to write. She died in 2022 aged 77 in Sydney.

Works

Novels

Blue Skies, London: Duckworth, 1976 ; translated into German: Gleichbleibend schön Jack and Jill, London: Duckworth, 1978 ; translated into German: Jack & Jill Broken Words, Ringwood, Victoria: Penguin, 1988 ; US edition: Ducks, Harmony, 1989 Waiting for Matindi, St Leonards, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 1998 Passing Remarks, Sydney: Anchor Books, 1996 The Bad Policeman, Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin, 2001

Screenplay

The Right Hand Man, for the 1987 film directed by Di Drew and starring Rupert Everett, Hugo Weaving and Arthur Dignam, based on the 1977 novel of the same name by K. M. Peyton.