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Bruce Alexander Grant (4 April 1925 – 3 August 2022) was an Australian journalist, foreign correspondent, government advisor, diplomat, novelist and author of several books on Australian politics and foreign policy. Early life Grant was born in Perth on 4 April 1925, and grew up in Kalgarin in outback Western Australia. His success in a state exam won him a place at Perth Modern School. Journalist Grant cut short his final year of secondary schooling to join Perth afternoon newspaper, the Daily News as a reporter. After military service, in 1946 he married Enid Mary Walters and they lived with children Susan, Johanna and James at 3 Hawthorn Gve. Hawthorn. He studied arts at the University of Melbourne, under Manning Clark (to whom later in London he became close), and where he could combine the academic study with a diploma course in journalism. From that he launched a career writing criticism on Australian film and theatre noting in 1958, that; If we get a dramatist with the same poetic vision for lonely heroism as the painter Sidney Nolan and novelist Patrick White, the stage will need more air . From 1951 was employed as film critic, by Melbourne's The Age newspaper where he was the only university graduate on staff. From 1953 he also presented film reviews in a radio program on 3AR, and promoted the idea of a Melbourne film festival. In 1954, then living at 29 Torbay St., Macleod, he left the country to become the paper's London correspondent, writing a column entitled "A Window In London", then was joined by wife Enid, whose father died in an accidental drowning shortly before her departure. In the UK Grant covered subjects as diverse as Britain's "Color Problem," buskers, Labour party disunity, Malta's bid for independence, London's premiere of the Australian play Summer of the Seventeenth Doll; Robert Menzies' 1956 failed attempt to negotiate with Egypt's president Gamal Nasser during the Suez Crisis; and the Hungarian revolution. Conversely he was writing features on Australian subjects, such as the Eureka Stockade, a shearers' strike, and education in the Outback, for The Guardian, and occasionally for its sister paper The Observer, whose Guy Wint wrote one of the first reviews of Grant's Indonesia in 1964, which he said; "must be the model of its kind." In September 1958 he flew from the UK to Harvard University via New York. In 1964, Grant resigned as The Age’s Washington correspondent, having reported from there during the terms of two Presidents, Kennedy and Johnson. Intellectual, creative and administrative contributions to the arts Grant also wrote for magazines as varied as Walkabout, The New Yorker, Mademoiselle, Playboy, Cleo, The Port Phillip Gazette, The Bulletin, Quadrant, Overland and Meanjin, and was an author of three novels on the theme 'Love in the Asian Century', and of short stories, poetry, and essays including "The Great Pretender at the Bar of Justice," written at the trial of Slobodan Milošević, published in The Best Australian Essays 2002; and "Bali: The Spirit of Here and Now," written after the October 2002 bombings, published in The Best Australian Essays 2004. He spent periods researching and teaching in universities, including as a Nieman Fellow at Harvard, and a member of the councils of Monash, where he lectured in statecraft to young diplomats, and Deakin universities. Grant promoted Australian culture, and its links with Asia as chair of the Australian Dance Theatre, and the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, and president of Melbourne's International Film Festival, and of the Spoleto Festival, which became the Melbourne International Arts Festival. Foreign affairs Grant's first book Indonesia of 1964 came at a time of high tension between Britain and Indonesia over the year-old Federation of Malaysia, which Indonesian leaders opposed and which resulted in the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation. He was subsequently witness to, and an influence on, centres of power in Australia for several decades, as journalist and foreign correspondent, diplomat, public intellectual, and advisor to Menzies, whose letter of reference to ambassadors facilitated his reporting as Asian correspondent, and to subsequent governments from Whitlam to Hawke and Keating. Grant was chairman of the Australia-Indonesia Institute and his book Indonesia (1964) remains a classic and insightful study of Australia's relations with its most powerful near neighbour. From 1972 Grant advised the new prime minister Gough Whitlam, who “startled officials at a meeting by introducing me as his Dr Kissinger,” and appointed Grant as Australian High Commissioner to India (1973–1976) in which post he was an early advocate of the importance of Asia to Australia, having asked as he diverged from his career as journalist; Can the newspapers stop Australia from turning inward, from becoming isolationist? (Roy Milne Memorial Lecture, 7 August 1969)Grant campaigned to abolish the White Australia policy, opposed the Vietnam war as counterproductive to Australia's credibility in S.E. Asia, and joined the Australian Committee for a New China Policy, urging recognition of the People's Republic of China. Through his The Boat People he analysed, and promoted understanding of, the political causes and social ramifications of increasing numbers of Vietnamese refugees arriving by boat on Australia's shores. Consultant to the federal Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Gareth Evans, 1988–91, they co-wrote Australia's Foreign Relations in the World of the 1990s (1991). In 2008, Grant initiated the colloquium 'Australia as a Middle-Ranking Power' hosted in Canberra at Manning Clark House in Conjunction with the Australian Institute of International Affairs. Legacy In 2017, Grant released his memoir Subtle moments: scenes on a life's journey, named from a phrase from Albert Camus who wrote of "that subtle moment when man glances backward over his life ... contemplat[ing] that series of unrelated actions which become his fate" Bruce Grant died 3 August 2022, at the age of 97. He was survived by his sister, Jocelyn, and four of his five children; Susan, Jaems, David and Ben, six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. He was predeceased by his sister Audrey, daughter Johanna, and first wife Enid. Awards 2003: Doctor of Letters (honoris causa), Monash University 2010: Distinguished Fellow, Australian Institute of International Affairs Books Grant, Bruce (1964). Indonesia (1st ed.). Melbourne University Press and Cambridge University Press. Grant, Bruce; Australian Institute of International Affairs (1969), Foreign affairs and the Australian press, Australian Institute of International Affairs Laking, G. R. (George Robert); Grant, Bruce, 1925–; Castle, L. V; New Zealand Institute of International Affairs (1970), New Zealand and Australia : foreign policy in the 1970s : papers read at the 1969 Conference of the Institute, Price Milburn for the New Zealand Institute of Inte.... Discover the Trish Milburn popular books. 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  • Living in Color synopsis, comments

    Living in Color

    Trish Milburn

    After the death of her father, Sabrina Bishop feels a sense of relief that he's gone. No longer will he be able to abuse her mother mentally or physically, and just maybe her mothe...

  • Out of Sight synopsis, comments

    Out of Sight

    Trish Milburn

    Jenna McCay is a street cop in Nashville when a secret government agency discovers her ability to make herself invisible and coerces her to come work for them in exchange for infor...

  • Winter Longing synopsis, comments

    Winter Longing

    Trish Milburn

    Winter Craig finally gets up the nerve and tells her longtime friend Spencer that she likes him as more than a friend. The best part? Spencer likes her as more than a friend too.&#...

  • Hill Country Hearts synopsis, comments

    Hill Country Hearts

    Trish Milburn

    Texas Ranger Gwen Phillips is one of the most hardworking law enforcement officers in the state of Texas, driven by a childhood event that shaped not only her work ethic but also h...

  • Love in Peril synopsis, comments

    Love in Peril

    Trish Milburn

    Love in Peril is a collection of three fulllength romantic suspense novels. One (Dangerous Kisses) is a Golden Heart Award winner, and another (Firefly Run) is a finalist. Dan...

  • Falling for the Flyboy synopsis, comments

    Falling for the Flyboy

    Trish Milburn

    After the loss of her husband, Amanda Perry knew the only way she had any hope of getting over her grief was to start a new life somewhere else. So she left Georgia, her career and...

  • Firefly Run synopsis, comments

    Firefly Run

    Trish Milburn

    Shelly Myers has finally rebuilt her life two years after her new husband, a Dallas police detective, was gunned down on the church steps minutes after they'd said, "I do." She ret...

  • Wish Upon a Star synopsis, comments

    Wish Upon a Star

    Trish Milburn

    Two wary souls. Two paths crossing. One unexpected love.Park DaeHyun has been dancing on stage for years as a member of popular Kpop group Sky High, but when he is cast as a contes...

  • Summer Rain synopsis, comments

    Summer Rain

    Trish Milburn

    When Sara Park moves from Seattle to Korea, she's excited to begin a new life and a new job alongside the man who has come to mean a lot to her during some of her darkest days. But...

  • Dress Me in Wildflowers synopsis, comments

    Dress Me in Wildflowers

    Trish Milburn

    Farrin Taylor is a living ragstoriches story, but it's not a story she cares to share with anyone. To her, the rags part of her story is in the past and should stay there. When she...

  • A Very Merry Romance synopsis, comments

    A Very Merry Romance

    Trish Milburn

    A Very Merry Romance by Trish MilburnWhen Avery Phillips loses her magazine job right before Christmas, she heads back home to Starfish Shores to spend the holidays with the grandp...

  • Spring is for Love synopsis, comments

    Spring is for Love

    Trish Milburn

    LeeLee Kern is a woman on a mission. In the wake of her exhusband's betrayal, she's determined to make a better life for herself and her young daughter. That's why in addition to h...

  • Heartbreak River synopsis, comments

    Heartbreak River

    Trish Milburn

    Alexandra Landon once loved running the Grayton River through the Colorado canyons near her home and couldn’t imagine doing anything else with her life but continuing the family’s ...

  • Life on Hold synopsis, comments

    Life on Hold

    Trish Milburn

    Grier Hamilton opens her front door expecting to see her prom date. Instead, she finds several police officers, and they are there to arrest her dad...for murder.Someone has made a...

  • Dangerous Kisses synopsis, comments

    Dangerous Kisses

    Trish Milburn

    Crime beat reporter Sydney Blackburn is dedicated to giving her readers the truth, not because she wants her name on a lot of bylines but because she feels it's her duty to give th...