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Winton Higgins Winton Higgins i(9911022 works by)
Born: Established: 1941 Sydney, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Love, Death, Chariot of Fire Winton Higgins , Blackheath : Brandl and Schlesinger , 2020 19984066 2020 single work novel historical fiction

'Reg Mitchell is a modest, decent man with a gift for designing fast aeroplanes. Two horrors seek him out – terminal illness, and Nazi Germany’s predicted invasion of his country. His response will change the course of world history.

'“Here is a splendid love story of maker for machine: an inventor’s single-minded devotion to his imperilled country, and to the fighter plane that he hopes will save it. Winton Higgins handles the origin story of the Spitfire with the surefootedness of the historian, and eloquence of the poet. His drama of creation is made all the more poignant by its backdrop of destruction: the collective destruction of war, and the personal destruction of the cancer that Mitchell attempts to outpace just long enough to get the job done.” Sarah Knox, author of the Orphan Gunner.

'“If you love aeroplanes – and even if you don’t – this book is a must. There is a saying among pilots ‘if it looks good it will fly well’ and there can be no better example than the Supermarine Spitfire, the graceful and deadly British superhero of World War II. The Spitfire evolved into a fighter plane that could out-climb, out-run, out-turn and out-fight anything in the sky. Pilots didn’t like the Spitfire, they loved it. Winton Higgins has written a fluent and brilliantly researched story of the Spitfire’s designer Reg Mitchell, and the creation of a unique classic aircraft. Spellbinding!” Peter Grose, author of A Good Place to Hide.'

1 y separately published work icon Rule of Law Winton Higgins , Blackheath : Brandl and Schlesinger , 2016 9911094 2016 single work novel historical fiction

'This novel follows four participants with contrasting backgrounds through the nerve-racking first Nuremberg trial (1945-6) and the turbulence of the war-damaged, polyglot ‘trial community’ thrown together and dumped into a small, bombed-out city.

'One participant is a defendant and former Nazi top propagandist fighting for his life. The other three – a Jewish German-American prosecution interpreter, a British judge, and a German woman (one of the tribunal’s pioneering simultaneous interpreters) – play active roles in the trial and come to identify with its breathtaking ambition to set a judicial precedent that will deprive perpetrators everywhere of their impunity, in aid of a new world where human rights hold sway. Katerina, the simultaneous interpreter, is newly married to an Australian member of the British prosecution, but is also struggling to restore the decency and honour of her own nation after its profound corruption during the Nazi era. All four work in the daily glare of global press and radio attention. Their encounter discloses the trial’s long-term legacy in the development of an international rule of law.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Journey into Darkness Winton Higgins , Blackheath : Brandl and Schlesinger , 2003 9911043 2003 single work prose travel

'“Part travel diary, part historical investigation, part reflection on contemporary Australia, this sober and civilised book provides a remarkably lucid introduction to the study of the Holocaust.” Robert Manne

'“Journey Into Darkness is not just about the Holocaust… but it also raises important questions for us as Australians.” Veronica Brady

'“In this profound and compassionate book, Winton Higgins makes takes us, in true Buddhist style, into the pain and truth of our own Australian story.” Dorothy McRae-McMahon' (Publication summary)

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