Robert Macklin

Robert Victor Macklin (born 1941 in Brisbane) is an Australian author and journalist. He was educated at Ironside Primary School, Brisbane Grammar School and the Australian National University.

He began his writing career for the ''Courier-Mail'' in Brisbane, later moving to ''The Age'' in Melbourne, ''The Bulletin'' in Sydney and the ''Canberra Times'' in Canberra. In 1967 he became press secretary to Deputy Prime Minister John McEwen shortly before the death of Harold Holt when McEwen briefly became Prime Minister.

In 1974 while working in the Philippines at the Asian Development Bank he began writing both fiction and non-fiction books, beginning with the novel ''The Queenslander''. Awarded a Commonwealth Writer's Fellowship, he returned to Australia in 1975 and wrote ''The Paper Castle'' (1978) and ''Juryman'' (1980), adapted by MGM to the film ''Storyville'' (1994) starring James Spader and Jason Robards.

His non-fiction work includes ''Seven Cities of Australia'', ''Dark Paradise, Norfolk Island: Isolation, Savagery'', ''Murder''; ''100 Great Australians'', ''The Secret Life of Jesus'', ''Jacka VC: Australian Hero'', ''Fire in the Blood: The epic tale of Frank Gardiner and Australia's other bushrangers'', ''Bravest: How Some of Australia's Greatest War Heroes Won Their Medals'', the memoir ''War Babies'', ''Kevin Rudd: The Biography, My Favourite Teacher, The Great Australian Pie, One False Move, SAS Sniper (with Rob Maylor), Redback One, SAS Insider, Warrior Elite, Hamilton Hume, Dragon & Kangaroo.''

With Peter Thompson he co-authored ''The Battle of Brisbane'', ''The Man Who Died Twice – the life and adventures of Morrison of China'', ''Kill The Tiger'', ''Keep Off the Skyline'' and ''The Big Fella: The Rise and Rise of BHP Billiton.''

His awards include the Blake Dawson Prize for Business Literature (with Peter Thompson) in 2009, and Canberra Critics Circle awards for ''One False Move'', ''Dark Paradise'' and ''Hamilton Hume - Our Greatest Explorer.''

He is a graduate of the screen writing course of the Australian Film, Television and Radio School and has written and directed documentary films in 32 countries of Asia and the South Pacific. With producer Andrew Pike he has written the screenplay ''Barefoot'' on Australia’s only Chinese bushranger, Sam Poo. Married to Wendy Macklin, he has two sons, and currently divides his time between Canberra and Tuross Head. Provided by Wikipedia

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