Who?

Luke Keioskie has been a professional writer in Australia and the UK since the millenium turned and the world didn’t end. His first novel Room One Nineteen was published by Lothian Books in 2005 and he has published short fiction in Wet Ink magazine. A one time lecturer in Creative Writing, he is currently a journalist by day and a zombie novelist by night. He lives at Coffs Harbour and spends far too much time at the beach.

 

 

Tolpuddle MartyrsJanette Dalgliesh is a sometime writer, director, puppeteer, editor, researcher, unionist and political animal. Bitten by the writing bug in the mid-eighties when she wrote for The New Adventures of Blinky Bill, she has made her living through words more or less ever since. These days she works as a union organiser based at the University of Ballarat. Her first novel Kindred Spirit was selected for the inaugural QWC/Orbit manuscript development program in 2008.

 

Graham StorrsGraham Storrs has published over a hundred articles and humorous pieces for popular magazines, along with three science books for children and other writing projects (educational wall-charts, the computer entries for the Hutchinson Encyclopedia, etc.). He has also published over thirty, refereed, scientific papers and book chapters.

Born and educated in England, Graham also lived in Scotland and Switzerland before moving to Australia with his wife and daughter and taking Australian citizenship. Graham now lives in rural Queensland and dedicates himself to writing speculative and crime fiction, mostly set in and around Brisbane, where he lived and worked for many years.

Terry Hornby doesn’t do much of anything if he can get away with it. Sadly, this has yet to happen; he lives on the Sunshine Coast in Queensland with two sons, a dog and Glenda – a saint who married him in a moment of weakness, he hopes the moment never passes. Inside his house is nearly every spec fiction book he has read plus a couple he wrote himself. He wears a hat stating “I’d rather be writing’ and grows more pompous every day.

 

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