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Emma Harcourt Emma Harcourt i(A7666 works by)
Born: Established: 1967 Sydney, New South Wales, ;
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 Totally Devoted to Love and Miracles Emma Harcourt , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 20 November 2021; (p. 14)

— Review of Devotion Hannah Kent , 2021 single work novel
1 Suburban Savagery Emma Harcourt , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 30 October 2021; (p. 17)

— Review of Wild Place Christian White , 2021 single work novel
1 Wife Gets Her Own Voice Emma Harcourt , 2021 single work review
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 17 July 2021; (p. 16)

— Review of The Good Wife of Bath : A (Mostly) True Tale Karen Brooks , 2021 single work novel

'Chaucer’s most famous work, The Canterbury Tales, is a series of poems in Middle English in which 31 pilgrims wending their way to the shrine of Thomas Beckett in Canterbury each tell a tale to pass the time. One of the group is a Wife and hers is a lust-filled, boastful tale of her five marriages.' (Introduction)

1 y separately published work icon The Shanghai Wife Emma Harcourt , Sydney South : HQ Fiction , 2018 13530838 2018 single work novel historical fiction

'Shanghai, 1925: Leaving behind the loneliness and trauma of her past in country Australia, Annie Brand arrives to the political upheaval and glittering international society of Shanghai in the 1920s. Journeying up the Yangtze with her new husband, the ship's captain, Annie revels in the sense of adventure but when her husband decides the danger is too great and sends her back to Shanghai, her freedom is quickly curtailed.

'Against her will, Annie finds herself living alone in the International Settlement, increasingly suffocated by the judgemental Club ladies and their exclusive social scene: one even more restrictive than that she came from. Sick of salacious gossip and colonial condescension, and desperate to shake off the restrictions of her position in the world, Annie is slowly drawn into the bustling life and otherness of the real Shanghai, and begins to see the world from the perspective of the local people, including the servants who work at her husband's Club.

'But this world is far more complex and dangerous than the curious Annie understands and unknowingly, she becomes caught in a web of intrigue and conspiracy as well as a passionate and forbidden love affair she could not have predicted: one with far–reaching consequences…'

Source: Publisher's blurb.

1 Benelong's Haven i "A dry-out centre for drunks", Emma Harcourt , 1987 single work poetry
— Appears in: 1987 Anthology of Australian Poetry 1987; (p. 217)
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