Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} by 9780207169489 - Come in Spinner by Cusack, D ; James, F. Paperback. Condition: Very Good. The book has been read, but is in excellent condition. Pages are intact and not marred by notes or highlighting. The spine remains undamaged. Come in Spinner. James, F. Cusack D. Published by HarperCollins Publishers, 1993. Used - Softcover. HarperCollins Publishers Australia, 1990. Soft Cover. Book Condition: Good. Moderate reading wear. Very clean interior. Come in Spinner. James, Florence Bean,Cusack, Dymphna. Published by Angus & Robertson Childrens, 1990. Used - Softcover Condition: Good. Paperback. Condition: Good. All orders are dispatched the following working day from our UK warehouse. Established in 2004, we have over 500,000 books in stock. No quibble refund if not completely satisfied. Tell us what you're looking for and once a match is found, we'll inform you by e-mail. Can't remember the title or the author of a book? Our BookSleuth is specially designed for you. Shop With Us. Sell With Us. About Us. Find Help. Other AbeBooks Companies. Follow AbeBooks. By using the Web site, you confirm that you have read, understood, and agreed to be bound by the Terms and Conditions. Come in Spinner. The TV series drama Come in Spinner is based on the novel by Dymphna Cusack. The show is set in Australia during the World War 2. The show follows a group of women working at an upperclass Sydney hotel beauty salon. The show's primary focus is to showcase the different issues present at the time. Working at such an affluent salon, they see the lives of the rich and how easy it is. The TV series drama Come in Spinner is based on the novel by Dymphna Cusack. The show is set in Australia during the World War 2. The show follows a group of women working at an upperclass Sydney hotel beauty salon. The show's primary focus is to showcase the different issues present at the time. Working at such an affluent salon, they see the lives of the rich and how easy it is. Hunter Living Histories. Marilla North launches her eagerly awaited first installment of Yarn Spinners on the lives of three extraordinary women; Dymphna Cusack, and Florence James at a FREE event during the Hunter Writers Festival this Friday “In Conversation with Dr Ann Hardy” 11-12pm Mulubinba Room, Newcastle Town Hall. Marilla North is a born and bred Novocastrian (Newcastle Girls High School 1962) and Newcastle University College alumna 1963-65, and now a proud member of the UON’s Hunter Living Histories Initiative (formerly Coal River Working Party). Her involvement in Hunter Regional History explains the prominent role of Dr Ann Hardy and Vera Deacon’s in the forthcoming launch event for YARN SPINNERS this coming Friday morning at Newcastle City Hall. International best-selling author, Dymphna Cusack, taught at Newcastle Girls High School in 1942 and was involved since the late 1930s in the political and cultural life of the Coalfields and the City. DYMPHNA CUSACK is the key subject of Marilla’s biographical trilogy, “Come in Dymphna”, and she would especially love the Humanities & Social Science Faculty and students, in particular, to gain a better understanding and awareness of the debt we all owe today to Dymphna and her cohort of women friends. They collaborated across continents in their feisty efforts to win a place for women in and the agency to influence many areas of social justice. Dymphna Cusack, Miles Franklin and Florence James come alive on these pages through the dynamic of their collaborative friendships as revealed in their letters and in the novels, plays and campaigns that they generated together. Their combined political zeal in fighting the conservative forces which kept women, Aborigines and other minorities out of the decision making arena is an inspiration for all women today. “From Newcastle to New York and London, women face the same forces today that they did for centuries, and which, some would argue, are converging, world-wide, yet again, with even fiercer authoritarianism agendas aimed at rechannelling the power out of democratic processes and into the hands of a political-arms manufacturing nexus.” – Marilla North said. She added; “These three women fought for law reform across many diverse arenas and did not shy away from exposing the tragic consequences of war or taking on the armaments industry; educating populations world-wide on the dangers of nuclear weapons. Florence James spent a month in gaol during the famous Aldermaston Marches of the 1950s; Dymphna Cusack’s anti A-bomb Testing play “Pacific Paradise” was translated into many languages and played world-wide from Japan to BBC London to Uzbekistan. Their loyal friend and mentor, Miles Franklin, had been at the forefront in the formation of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom in The Hague in 1915, and whose message is sustained in Newcastle today through the affiliated Hunter Peace Group and the Hiroshima Day March on 6th August annually.” Dymphna, Miles and Florence were pioneers fighting on many fronts and their writing was concurrent with their battles – whether for a fair royalty for colonial authors from the British dominated publishing industry – which Dymphna Cusack finally brought over the line with her WW II novel set in Newcastle in 1942, “” (1953) ‒ or against unjust Government policies which persecuted the victims of poverty, homelessness, alcoholism and enforced refugee status. Yarn Spinners was first published by UQP in 2001 and is reissued by Brandl & Schlesinger in 2016 in this beautifully produced, new and revised edition. North has updated the content within the dynamic historical perspective that has been enabled by the advances in international digital archives. This book is an invaluable contribution to our and future generations’ understanding of Australian social and literary history. Yarn Spinners is now Volume One of Marilla North’s biographical trilogy on the life and times of Dymphna Cusack and her “congenials” under the rubric, Come in Dymphna . Newcastle Launch Invite. Marilla North was born and educated in Newcastle, NSW. She gained Honours I in English in the Leaving Certificate at NGHS where she first read Dymphna Cusack’s WW II novel Southern Steel , the book that ignited her passionate commitment to Cusack’s life and work. Marilla’s poetry was published regularly in the Canberra Times over the early 1970s and, later in journals such as Refractory Girl , Meanjin Quarterly and Hecate-Interdisciplinary Journal . Chair of English at ANU, Professor AD Hope, mentored Marilla in developing her poetry collection, Blue Glass and Turtles’ Eggs, published by Jacaranda Press in 1975 – International Women’s Year. From the mid 1970s Marilla was designing and conducting national media education research studies for the ABC and the Australian Film, Television and Radio School. In 1980-1981 she was appointed the NSW State Director of the United Nations International Year of Disabled Persons (IYDP 1981). She went on to set up a Foundation for the NSW Conservatorium of Music. Marilla completed her MA (Hons) at Wollongong University in 1991 with a dissertation on the Cusack-James’ collaboration, the best seller Come in Spinner . Over the 1990s she lectured in literature and life writing whilst publishing freelance journalism and book reviews and conducting communications-related market research projects. After nearly ten years spent caring for her aged mother, in 2014 Marilla was awarded the Alfred Midgley Post Graduate Fellowship from the University of Queensland enabling her to return to her biographical trilogy on the life and times of Dymphna Cusack that she had been working on since 1991. She had previously (since 1979) worked on the epic saga of the battle to publish Come in Spinner with its co-author, Florence James. In 2001 UQP published her ground-breaking hybrid narrative Yarn Spinners: A Story in Letters ‒ Dymphna Cusack, Miles Franklin and Florence James which won the 2001 FAW Biography Prize. Since 2001 Marilla has taught Australian literature to American students at Boston University’s Sydney Programme. She lives with her husband in Leura, in the upper Blue Mountains, enjoying the creative community of kindred spirits. Dymphna Cusack & Florence James – literary chicks. LITERARY analysis of the Blue Mountains in NSW tends to focus, perhaps a little too much, on the works of Eleanor Dark and Norman Lindsay, the enduring foundation for writers which bears her name, and the iconic gallery featuring his. Other writers’ works also emerged from the cool climate heights of the region, in fact one of Australia’s most popular and enduring novels was written in the tiny town of Hazelbrook, in a home which never became a writers’ retreat. The story behind its creation is the story of two women, their daughters and niece, who escaped the wartime city in order to live and write, and in doing so, created a literary milestone… This article was published in the June-July 2011 edition of Blue Mountains Life . Come Home Spinner. The Hazelbrook tenants who created Australian Chick Lit. In the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Sydney Harbour in May-June of 1942, Sydneysiders woke-up to the reality of imminent attack, and many headed for the Blue Mountains to ‘see out’ the war. With two generations of men fighting in Europe, job opportunities for women were on the increase, and the city was flooded with American troops. Right in the thick of this changing world, two writers — Dymphna Cusack (1902-1981) and Florence James (1902-1993) — rekindled the friendship they’d started as undergraduates at Sydney University in the 1920s. Florence had been ‘caught by the war’ in Sydney with daughters Julie and Frances while on a visit from London, and Dymphna was living with her sister and family at Coogee. In spring, 1944, the women hatched an escape plan of their own: to write full-time in the sleepy Blue Mountains village of Hazelbook. Dymphna had retired early from teaching, suffering with multiple sclerosis. Florence needed a place to live while her husband Pym served in Europe. Combining Cusack’s small pension and periodic literary grants with Florence’s ‘allotment’ from Pym, in January, 1945, the families moved to ‘Pinegrove’ on the south side of Hazelbrook. In this unassuming fibro cottage with views to the Sydney basin, James’ and Cusack’s ruminations on literature and social justice gave birth to the first international bestseller to present contemporary Australian women to the world. They started with a children’s book — Four Winds and a Family — created in autumn, 1945. An allegorical telling of the adventurous episodes of the Pinegrove residents, complete with writers Tess and Topsy (Florence and Dymphna), and youngsters Fan (Frances), Jay (Julie) and Dee (Dymphna’s neice, also called Dymphna), and various cats, goats and other animals, the book maps their ever-growing world of friendly neighbours and unfriendly school teachers. FAMILY PICTURES Nan Knowles’ illustrations show an allegorised Florence and Dymphna. They commissioned Nan Knowles to illustrate and sent the manuscript to a publisher the same year. Knowles’ work included a naive map (eventually the front endpaper) illustrating the part-real part-fantasy realm of Four Winds. It’s an enduring symbol of the secure world mother and aunt sought for daughters and niece at Pinegrove. Emboldened by their success in juvenile fiction, Florence and Dymphna soon embarked on their magnum opus, the book they’d been talking into existence ever since leaving the city: Come in Spinner . “We picked everyone’s brains,” Florence recalled when interviewed by Marilla North (editor of Yarn Spinners – A Story in Letters the letters of Dymphna Cusack, Florence James and Miles Franklin). “Everyone” included local cleaning help Mrs Catherine Elliot (who regaled the authors about the realities of working as a barmaid in the inner city); and Blue Mountains Mayor Tom Walford (who explained the rules of popular gambling game ‘Two-Up’ in which ‘Come in Spinner’ is the call ending all bets before two pennies are spun). Through the author’s letters, Marilla North was able to pinpoint the exact day that work on Come in Spinner began at Hazelbrook – Monday July 30, 1945, only a fortnight before the end of the Pacific War. “Addressing issues like abortion, rape and prostitution, Cusack and James’ second collaboration placed female protagonists in the real world.” “It took us two-and-a-half years to write,” Florence explained, “we didn’t write by each exclusively developing one character’s story. If one of us had an inspiration about it then she’d do that bit of the writing. Then everything had to be interwoven”. “We worked five days a week when the kids were at school. At the weekends we had friends up and kept in touch with what was going on in Sydney. We went down there occasionally and very reluctantly…” Florence said. In order to write without causing pain to her hands, Dymphna made use of a dictaphone she nick-named ‘Delphi’ (probably a reference to the Delphic Oracle in ancient Greece into which prayers were whispered). Tom Walford arranged for local typist Joan Gray to produce manuscripts from Cusack’s reels. The story of a trio of resident beauticians at the fictitious Marie Antoinette salon of the Hotel South Pacific, Come in Spinner explores their lives and relationships against a cross section of Sydney’s working and elite classes. Seen objectively, beauticians Deb, Claire and Guinea are the natural evolution of the three girls in Four Winds and a Family , placed in a world much less secure, with no map to guide them save whatever moral compass their upbringing had given them. Each of the women takes a journey through wartime Sydney, juxtaposed against the innocence that came before shortages and the black market, and a new world of gaining an advantage by any means. In Four Winds and a Family the breeze is never strong enough to blow the girls into too much trouble, whereas Come in Spinner suggests life’s fortunes can be decided in a gamble. Addressing issues like abortion, rape and prostitution, Cusack’s and James’ second collaboration placed female protagonists in the real world, making it hot property even before publication. Entered anonymously into The Daily Telegraph’s novel prize of 1946, the families remained at Pinegrove while the authors edited their manuscript. In 1947, the cottage was sold, meaning eviction by June, even as editing continued. Florence and her daughters sailed for England to be with Pym. A separation of almost a decade (apart from occasional leave visits) saw the marriage unable to survive the reunion. Dymphna moved back to Sydney and continued work on other novels, sailing for Europe herself in 1949. HOME SPUN First edition cover (1951). Come in Spinner eventually won The Daily Telegraph award but was never granted the promised publication, considered too controversial for Australian release. The authors were awarded the thousand-pound prize, but had to extricate their work from the newspaper for Florence to offer it to publishers in the United Kingdom. The William Heinemann company published Come in Spinner in 1951. It proved an instant international bestseller after a series of rave reviews in the United Kingdom and has never been out of print. With its cast of female protagonists, and its omission from most literary criticism (despite an enduring popularity), the novel ranks amongst the first true examples of Chick Lit in the world. In deference to regular Pinegrove visitor and the author of My Brilliant Career , Come in Spinner was dedicated to the woman whom Dymphna Cusack described as the godmother of the collaboration – Miles Franklin (1879-1954). The drawn-out publication and success of Come in Spinner has tended to overshadow the other works which came out of Pinegrove. Two other novels by Dymphna Cusack ( , exploring the affliction of tuberculosis, researched in part at Bodington TB sanatorium in Wentworth Falls where one of Dymphna’s friends was a patient; and Southern Steel , set in the industrial city of Newcastle) were substantially written while at Hazelbrook. Another collaboration of sorts was Caddie – the story of a Barmaid written by the woman who came once a week for laundry and chat – Catherine Elliot. It was Dymphna and Florence who suggested to Elliot that she write her memoir in her own ‘voice’. Dymphna edited the manuscript, assisted Elliot in finding a publisher, and wrote the forward for the novel which became a classic and a popular movie in 1976. In her capacity as an editor and literary agent, Florence James encouraged two further generations of female Australian authors, including Mary Durack and Nancy Phelan. Justine Clarke and Rebecca Gibney in the ABC’s production of Come in Spinner (1989). Come in Spinner was adapted as a mini series by the ABC in 1989. Times had changed enough for an unabridged version of the novel to be published in Australia by Angus and Robertson. Dymphna had died in 1981, after spending three decades travelling and writing, mainly abroad, which meant Florence was tasked with editing controversial sections of the collaborative work which were removed before publication in the 1950s. Pinegrove still stands at Hazelbrook, although its original acre is somewhat diminished by development and many of its pines are gone. It was renamed ‘Four Winds’ after becoming the home of Sheryl and Geoff Smith three decades ago. There are traces of the literary hotbed the home was in the 1940s – the wall where Florence and Dymphna pinned-up a plan of the plot, characters and eight-day storyline of Come in Spinner is still there, off the sizeable living room which attracted the women to the house for their growing girls. The same room inspired Geoff and Sheryl to buy the house on first inspection. The autumn weekday afternoon of my visit comes with an almost complete silence which must have been a godsend for a pair of writers, nestled as the place is away from the highway and railway. Sheryl shares with me a copy of Four Winds and a Family given to her son by Florence James herself, who revisited the home for the making of a documentary not long before her death. On the fly leaf, a dedication reads: “A happy life at ‘Pinegrove’ – where Dee, Jay and Fan used to live – also did Tess – Florence James.” ‘Tess’ had come home, but what about ‘Topsy’? “Why oh why did we leave Pinegrove?” Dymphna wrote to Florence, on the brink of an international career which took off in a cottage in Hazelbrook. It is not known if she ever returned. Extracts from Yarn Spinners – A Story in Letters edited by Marilla North ( published with the permission of University of Q ueensland Press). Now available in a collector’s edition. Details about Come In Spinner Dymphna Cusack And Florence James 1951 First Published. You must return items in their original packaging and in the same condition as when you received them. If you don't follow our item condition policy for returns , you may not receive a full refund. 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