OUR CLIENTS
Janine M. Fraser
Childrens Author and Poet
Janine was a featured poet at the Mildura Writers' Festival in July 2006. Her poems have appeared in Antipodes, A North American Journal of Australian Literature.
She lives in Riddells Creek on the outskirts of Melbourne, Victoria with her husband. In 1995, Angus & Robertson (HarperCollins) published Fair Go, a skinny book about a boy who enters a school beauty contest in order to win the prize, a set of superb coloured pencils. So he wont be laughed at, he convinces the other boys to support him in the name of equal opportunity! In 1996 HarperCollins published Abdullahs Butterfly, a beautifully written short novel introducing children to the cultural/family environment of a young boy who lives in an Asian rainforest area. Sally Mcinerney in The Sydney Morning Herald noted: a charming story ... gently illustrated by (Kim) Gambles pictures. Abdullah has been been sold to the Spanish, Japanese and Korean markets. Knit Wit, an Addison Wesley Longman Sooper Dupa, was published in 1997, as was Birthday Blues, a Macmillan Crackers about a child who is upset by grandparents bickering at birthday time. The Waterslide was published in 1998, also as part of the Macmillan Crackers Series. In this humorous story for beginner readers, a mother overcomes her fear of heights to save the younger sibling of the narrator from the top of the water slide. In the end the mother spends the rest of the day enjoying the water slide!
See Janines novel for children, Sarindi the Lucky Bird, published by HarperCollins in April 2001. It was short listed for the 2002 Children's Book of the Year Awards in the Younger Readers category. It was also awarded a Highly Commended Award in the Younger Readers Category in the Australian Family Therapists Book Awards, as well as being short listed in the NSW Premiers Literary Awards for 2002. This touching tale is set in Indonesia. Sarindi thinks that luck is like a mischievous monkey, playing hide-and-seek, and it seems to be hiding from Sarindi and his family. When Sarindis father has an accident and loses his job as a becak driver, he says they must go to the bird market and buy a Lucky Bird. Then perhaps their luck will change. So does the magical song of the Lucky Bird change their luck? ...Or do they make their own luck in the end? (...from the cover). Janine is at present working on some more Sarindi stories.
GOLVAN ARTS MANAGEMENT • PO Box 766, Kew, Victoria 3101 Australia • golvan@ozemail.com.au