Back to All Events

Book Launch: My Heart is a Little Wild Thing / Harry Hartog

  • Harry Hartog ANU 153/11 University Avenue ANU Canberra Australia (map)

BOOK LAUNCH


When: Saturday, 28 May

Time: 12:00PM to 1:00PM

Venue: Harry Hartog ANU
153/11 University Avenue
Australian National University
Canberra, ACT 2601

Free event? Yes!

About the Book

Blood is thicker than water, but the heart is a little wild thing that can’t be tamed.

The day after I tried to kill my mother, I tossed some clothes, a pair of hiking boots, a baseball cap and a few toiletries into my backpack, and left at dawn.

Patrick has always considered himself a good son. Willing to live his life to please his parents, his sense of duty paramount to his own desires and dreams. But as his mother’s health continues to deteriorate and his siblings remain absent, he finds the ties that bind him to his mother begin to chafe.

After an argument leads to a violent act he travels to a familiar country retreat to reflect on what his life could be – and through a chance encounter with a rare animal and an intriguing stranger starts to wonder if perhaps it is not too late to let his heart run wild.

A story about family, love and the cost of freedom, My Heart is a Little Wild Thing serves as a reminder that we all deserve to pursue our dreams.

Nigel Featherstone’s latest novel is an intense emotional journey, across longing, loss, letting go and embracing the unknown. A reading experience to savour and revisit again and again.
— Melinda Smith, author of Drag Down to Unlock or Place an Emergency Call ​
A poignant and ultimately hopeful novel about how it’s never too late to find courage or connect with joy. I was captivated by the elegance of Featherstone’s prose and the quiet power of his voice.
— Delia Falconer, author of Signs and Wonders and The Service of Clouds

About The Author

Nigel Featherstone is the author of Bodies of Men which was longlisted for the 2020 ARA Historical Novel Prize, Highly Commended for the 2020 ACT Book of the Year, shortlisted in the 2019 Queensland Literary Awards, and received a 2019 Canberra Critics Circle Award. Nigel lives on the Southern Tablelands of New South Wales and spends considerable time in Canberra, the national capital of Australia.


Previous
Previous
27 May

Deadline: The Banjo Prize

Next
Next
30 May

Best Australian Yarn - Short Story Competition