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Sonya HartnettSonya Hartnett
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Critical perspective  
BiographySonya Hartnett was born in Melbourne, Australia, in 1968. Her first book, Trouble All the Way (1984), was published when she was just fifteen years old, and since then she has written many more books of fiction.
In Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf (2004), Satchel O'Rye and Chelsea Piper, marooned in an Australian backwater with the world passing them by, find their own survival becomes inextricably intwined with that of an animal they believe to be the last-ever Tasmanian wolf.
Sonya Hartnett's novel, The Ghost's Child, was shortlisted for the 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book). In the same year, she was awarded the prestigious Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award. Her latest book is Butterfly (2009).    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction, Young adult     BibliographyTrouble All the Way Rigby (Australia), 1984 Sparkle and Nightflower Rigby (Australia), 1986 The Glass House Macmillan (Australia), 1990 Wilful Blue Viking (Australia), 1994 Sleeping Dogs Viking (Australia), 1995 Black Foxes Viking (Australia), 1996 The Devil Latch Viking (Australia), 1996 Princes Viking (Australia), 1997 All My Dangerous Friends Viking (Australia), 1998 There Must Be Lions: Stories about Mental Illness (with Nick Earls and Heide Seaman) Ginniderra Press (Australia), 1998 Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf Viking (Australia) (first published UK, Walker, 2004), 1999 Forest Viking (Australia), 2001 Thursday's Child Walker Books, 2002 What the Birds See (first published as "Of a Boy", Viking (Australia), 2000) Walker Books, 2003 The Silver Donkey Viking, 2004 Surrender Walker Books, 2005 The Ghost's Child Walker Books, 2008 Butterfly Hamish Hamilton, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1992 Writer's Fellowship (Literature Board of the Australia Council) Wilful Blue 1996 IBBY (International Board on Books for Young People) Ena Noel Award Wilful Blue 1996 Miles Franklin Kathleen Mitchell Award (Australia) Sleeping Dogs 1996 New South Wales State Literary Award (shortlist) Sleeping Dogs 1996 Victorian Premier's Literary Award Sheaffer Pen Prize (Australia) Sleeping Dogs 1999 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (shortlist) All My Dangerous Friends 2000 Aurealis Awards: Best Novel in Young Adult Division Thursday's Child 2000 Australian Publishers Association Award (shortlist) Thursday's Child 2000 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (shortlist) Stripes of the Sidestep Wolf 2001 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award: Older Readers (shortlist) Thursday's Child 2001 New South Wales State Literary Award (shortlist) Thursday's Child 2002 Children's Book Council of Australia Book of the Year Award: Older Readers Forest 2002 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize Thursday's Child 2002 Mail on Sunday/John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (shortlist) Thursday's Child 2003 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) Of a Boy 2003 Miles Franklin Award (Australia) (shortlist) Of A Boy 2003 New South Wales State Literary Award (shortlist) Of A Boy 2006 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) (shortlist) Surrender 2008 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award (Sweden) 2008 Commonwealth Writers Prize (South East Asia and South Pacific Region, Best Book) (shortlist) The Ghost's Child    
  Critical PerspectiveAlthough Hartnett’s early breakthrough into the literary world at the age of 15 was an exciting kick-start to her career, she was inevitably labelled as a novelty teenage author and it took some years before her work was taken more seriously. Hartnett’s literary talent and credibility is now internationally recognised - particularly when she was awarded the 2008 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award. She is generally regarded as a writer of young adult fiction, but her work crosses over the boundaries to be enjoyed by adult readers as well. However, she has always been irritated by the constant debates over the classification of her novels:
Hartnett’s novels are, on the whole, quite dark, haunting and sometimes chilling. She tackles taboo subjects - child neglect, death, moral complexities - with a bold and savage honesty, and she explores the darker side of human nature with a razor-sharp perceptiveness. Hartnett is particularly interested in the ‘wild side’ (or potential wild side) of children, especially when they have been neglected. Many of her novels are set during war-time or other difficult periods of history such as the Depression. Whether her readers are adults or young people, Hartnett writes for the intelligent, sensitive reader and does not offer neat happy endings. Her style is poetic - lyrical and richly metaphorical - and the judges who awarded her the 2008 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award applauded her ‘linguistic virtuosity and brilliant narrative technique’.
What the Birds See (2003; first published in Australia as Of A Boy, 2000) takes a much more chilling look at the vulnerability of children and the wildness that can emerge when a child is not sufficiently loved or nurtured. Nine-year-old Adrian, who is deeply troubled by the disappearance of three local children, is surrounded by inadequate adults. Rejected by his parents, he lives with his resentful, bad-tempered grandmother and his agoraphobic uncle, whose ability to care for his nephew is overshadowed by his own vulnerability. Hartnett demonstrates acute empathy with her child characters, particularly Adrian who is swamped with fears and anxieties, desperately alone and confused in a world of adults who are unable to meet his needs:
The Silver Donkey (2004) is markedly different from Hartnett’s other novels - it is more along the lines of a classic and charming traditional children’s story. Set during World War I, the novel explores values such as honesty and courage through the story of a group of French children who find an English army deserter in the woods. As the children help the soldier, who is blind, vulnerable and sickened by the horrors he has seen, he repays them by telling delightful fables, all of which are linked to the silver donkey charm that he carries with him. His stories are extremely poignant, and Hartnett skilfully conveys moral messages about old-fashioned human values without preaching or self-righteousness.
In Surrender (2005), Hartnett returns to more familiar territory with another psychological exploration of the darker side of human nature. The narration moves back and forth between 20-year-old Gabriel, who is dying, and his childhood friend Finnigan. The story recounts Gabriel’s disturbing childhood and the chilling death of his handicapped brother, along with the dark and dangerous friendship he later formed with Finnigan. Surrender is a psychological thriller which continues Hartnett’s exploration of the damage caused by childhood neglect, particularly the way in which the damaged child, in his desperate desire to find love and reassurance, is extremely vulnerable to forming exploitative friendships.
The Ghost’s Child (2008) is a profound and philosophical fable-like story, which Linda Newbery has likened to Paul Gallico’s The Snow Goose (review in The Guardian, 28 June 2008). The story begins and ends with 75-year-old Matilda, who has found a strange young boy in her sitting room, but the majority of the text is Matilda’s story of her life when she was young, at which time she was known as Maddy. Her father poses the question, ‘What is the world’s most beautiful thing?’ and Maddy believes the answer is Feather, a mystical, ethereal young man she meets on a beach. However, her relationship with him brings both intense pleasure and acute, searing pain, ultimately leading to the loss of both Feather and the child that Maddy was carrying (‘a nymph, a little elf, a tiny fay’).
Hartnett’s poetic prose explores the nature of love and loss without sentimentality or cynicism, for although love is shown to bring intense pain, it is ‘like moonlight or thunder, or rain on a tin roof in the middle of the night: it is one of the things in life that is truly worth knowing’ (The Ghost’s Child). Maddy is ultimately strong enough to cope with her loss, and to involve herself in society and in helping others, particularly during the war. Her life is a rich exploration of the philosophical questions she had mused upon in childhood: ‘How does one craft sturdy happiness out of something as important, as complicated, as unrepeatable and as easily damaged as a life? Is love the answer, or freedom from love?’ (The Ghost’s Child). After years of debate over the age category of Hartnett’s novels, most reviewers agree that The Ghost’s Child is beyond classification, for it appeals equally to teenagers and adults.
Elizabeth O’Reilly, 2008  
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