Chris Pash

Chris Pash’s Followers (91)

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Brett
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Chris Pash

Goodreads Author


Born
Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Website

Genre

Member Since
February 2008

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Reads everything including the back of the cereal packet: science fiction; LA detective genre; history; biography ...
Chris Pash's creative nonfiction book, The Last Whale, about the Save the Whale campaign in the 1970s, was published by Fremantle Press in October 2008. He also writes the Cliché of the Week column for the media section of The Australian newspaper. He is currently working on a biography. He works in the news and information industry.
...more

Copyright Agency - Author Member VOTE

Author Members of the Copyright Agency will soon vote (2021) for a new representative on the board of directors.

Please consider Chris Pash:

The Copyright Agency needs directors with the expertise to make sensible commercial judgments on behalf of Members.

The mission of the Copyright Agency is fair payment to creators. It’s all about maximising returns for Members.

Chris Pash, a working editor an Read more of this blog post »
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Published on October 02, 2021 13:31 Tags: copyright-agency
Average rating: 4.22 · 50 ratings · 13 reviews · 2 distinct works
The Last Whale

4.22 avg rating — 50 ratings — published 2008 — 7 editions
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Fatal Honeymoon Dive
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bookshelves: currently-reading
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The Glamour of Gr...
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Red Blood: One (M...
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Topics Mentioning This Author

topics posts views last activity  
Aussie Readers: This topic has been closed to new comments. List of Aussie Authors who are members of Goodreads 4 424 Nov 12, 2013 04:56PM  
Aussie Readers: September - Favourite Genre Spell-It-Out Challenge 221 165 Oct 03, 2016 09:52PM  
Aussie Readers: This topic has been closed to new comments. * List of Aussie Authors who are members of Goodreads 5 144 Aug 27, 2019 10:09PM  
Around the World ...: Australia 64 1173 Jan 08, 2025 10:04PM  
Jon Doust
“From the opening sentence, it is clear that we are in the presence of a writer with a distinctive voice and uncanny ability to capture the bewilderment and burgeoning anger of a boy struggling to remain true to himself while navigating the hypocritical system he finds himself trapped in … what makes Boy on a Wire much more than a bleak coming-of-age story is Doust’s sharp wit. “Justice not only prevails at Grammar School, it is rampant.” If you know an angry teenager, give this to him.’ — The Age”
Jon Doust, Boy on a Wire

Jon Doust
“…a hilarious, angry and sympathetic portrait of boys behaving badly, teeming with sadistic bullies, imperfect heroes, adolescent onanists and ice-cream gorging hedonists.’— The West Australian”
Jon Doust, Boy on a Wire

Jon Doust
“The novel is apparently autobiographical and is being publicised as such but Doust has done with his material what so many autobiographical novelists fail to do: he has turned it into a shapely story, with no extraneous material or diversions and with an absolutely consistent and convincing narrative voice.’ — Sydney Morning Herald”
Jon Doust, Boy on a Wire

Jon Doust
“The boarding school memoir or novel is an enduring literary subgenre, from 1950s classics such as The Catcher in the Rye to Curtis Sittenfeld’s Prep. Doust’s recognisably Australian contribution to the genre draws on his own experiences in a West Australian boarding school in this clever, polished, detail-rich debut novel. From the opening pages, the reader is wholly transported into the head of Jack Muir, a sensitive, sharp-eyed boy from small-town WA who is constantly measured (unfavourably) against his goldenboy brother. The distinctive, masterfully inhabited adolescent narrator recalls the narrator in darkly funny coming-of-age memoir Hoi Polloi (Craig Sherborne)—as does the juxtaposition of stark naivety and carefully mined knowingness.’ — Bookseller+Publisher”
Jon Doust, Boy on a Wire

“Listen, Stephen King used to write in the washroom of his trailer after his kids went to sleep. Harlan Ellison wrote in the stall of a bathroom of his barracks during boot camp. Elmore Leonard got up at 5 AM every morning to write before work.
Every time my alarm goes off at 5 AM and I don’t want to get up, or I would rather sit down after work and play a videogame, I think about those guys. Take care of your family. They need you and love you. Make time for them. Then stop screwing around and finish your damn book.”
Bernard Schaffer, Whitechapel: The Final Stand of Sherlock Holmes

25x33 AustralianReaderdotcom — 64 members — last activity Mar 04, 2011 01:08PM
This is a group for readers, writers and staff of AustralianReader.com to get together and chat about literature, the site, and life in general.
721 Aussie Readers — 6450 members — last activity 12 minutes ago
A group for all Australian Goodreads members (and those interested in Australia), no matter what they read!
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For those who blog, love books and love to read them both! Let’s open up the world of blogging and have lots of fun doing it; please join our Group. E ...more
25350 THE JAMES MASON COMMUNITY BOOK CLUB — 6691 members — last activity Sep 15, 2025 09:51PM
ALL GENRE COMMUNITY OF BOOK LOVERS-Perfect for those interested in good books of any genre, film and lively discussion!- from current fiction, thrille ...more
37507 ANZ Authors — 78 members — last activity Oct 29, 2022 05:38PM
Aussies and Kiwis unite! Come and chat about the challenges and joys of writing in and about Australia and New Zealand. Readers welcome, as are people ...more
25x33 The Write Stuff — 33 members — last activity Aug 11, 2011 11:12AM
A group for writers and readers alike.
44234 Goodreads Self Published Authors — 1401 members — last activity May 25, 2025 09:51AM
A group for authors to help fellow authors in book promotion, review pools, and other things
36506 Indie Book Collective — 2956 members — last activity Aug 06, 2025 10:47PM
A group of indie authors, helping each other out and bringing new books to the world
41756 Tools for Writing — 30 members — last activity Apr 18, 2011 10:56AM
As an author my must haves for writing are a Thesaurus, gel ball or sharpie writing pen, lots of paper, internet and library. I would love to hear fr ...more
30255 Authors Without A Yacht (AWaY) — 144 members — last activity Feb 19, 2021 09:27AM
"Authors Without A Yacht" is a group where book lovers can ask questions and receive honest answers from authors who are affected by piracy. Most of ...more
More of Chris’s groups…



Comments (showing 1-28)    post a comment »
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message 28: by Chris

Chris that's OK. There are far too many people related in WA. I fully support immigration as it improves diversity. And I am prepared to keep an open mind despite your origins and the people you hang around with.


message 27: by Colin

Colin Ryan Well Chris we are not immediately related as I am a lapsed Pom (10 pounder, circa 1971).

We've probably met in Albany as I have, funnily enough, been acting strange down here since 1999.
In fact my profile picture on this site documents me destroying a Warrumpi Band song at Bob Howard's wake, which was held at Sarah's Father's house.
Strangely enough, this wake was held at Bob's request three days before he died!
He was lucky to make it that far as there wasn't much of him left by then.

I have been to a few wakes over the years, but this was the first one I have attended before the funeral, and where the subject of that odd mix of celebration and mourning was in attendance and (only just barely) alive.
But he was there! This was a very Bob thing to do.
Did you know Him? A wonderful person who is missed by us all.

Shit! Rambling again...
Thanks for not deleting my rambling post(s), for that's a hell of a lot of your pixels I have destroyed that are never coming back!


message 26: by Chris

Chris Indeed, the Albany connection works (had lunch with Jon Doust in Sydney today). and a friend of Sarah's. and with a dark habit -- books. I feel we have met or perhaps we're related (not uncommon in WA if you have a couple of headstones locally). and i find your rant strangely funny.
cheers!


message 25: by Colin

Colin Ryan Hi Chris,

You recently added me as a GoodReads friend.

Now, while I feel honoured to be befriended by someone of such a high standing in Australian literary circles, I can't help but wonder how you came across little old me.

I have come up with some points that may have drawn you towards a GoodReads friendship with me, please consider the following:

1) I live in Albany, W.A. and you have a connection to Albany.

2) I am a friend of Albany Blogger, and soon to be published first time novelist, Sarah Drummond.

3)My name is Colin, and I am a book addict.

A few words about my reading addiction:
It all started when I was very young as just casual reading at school and with my parents.
But it didn't take long before I was reading daily, sometimes several times a day.
I thought I could handle it at first, that I was better than those old men who spent their days hanging around at the State Library, but I was a fool, a weak and naive fool.
Reading was no longer a fun activity that I shared with my family and friends.
It had become something I couldn't live without, I now had to read every day just to be able to function like a normal human being.
I was reading in my bedroom, in the backyard, at the park, in the school library, on the way to school, at friends houses.
I was taking books to bed and reading way beyond my bedtime, sometimes I would be reading several books at once.
I was spending hours in dimly lit secondhand bookshops, and spending all my money on dog eared copies of Issac Asimov, Philip K Dick, Robert E Howard and, I feel so foolish to even mention this book, The Lord of the Rings.
I had no interest in sport, I was neglecting my friends, my hair grew long and unkempt.
To support my habit I took a job selling newspapers after school, but that was a mistake, I found I was reading the papers before I sold them.
I was in need of help.
It wasn't long before my parents noticed something was going on.
Maybe it was the books overflowing from every surface of my bedroom, or the callouses from turning innumerable pages, but they had noticed the changes in me.
The most glaringly obvious change was that my vocabulary had improved, no longer was I giving monosyllabic answers to my Mother's questions.
I was answering her in full sentences, paragraphs with correct grammar and punctuation, there was structure to my rhetoric, I was making sense!
Their worst fears were confirmed when I received Literature awards and A's on my reports three terms in a row.
If it wasn't for the love of my family helping me to confront my demons I have no idea where I would be now.
Their counsel offered me a lifeline and helped me learn to manage my addiction.
It was too late for me to consider abstinence, the need to read was now a vital part of my metabolism and I would have surely expired without my prescribed daily intake of fiction.
I am proud to say that I am now living a relatively normal life, albeit on a huge maintenance dose of literature that I daily self administer optically.
My tolerance for the written word is huge and my daily read would no doubt be fatal if it found it's way into the hands of an inexperienced reader.
I am grateful there isn't much call for on the black market for hard literature anymore.
Most of the secondhand bookshops have now been closed down and our schools are concentrating on Negative Student Achievements instead of the reading and writing which was once such a huge part of the curriculum.
Thankfully most children in the 21st have no desire to become addicted to literature, they have seen the devastating effect it had on their parent's generation and want no part of Academia and it's associated horrors.
Children these days are a lot more conservative than we were in the 60's and the 70's, and as such are more likely to be attracted to the methamphetamine family and it's chemical cousins.
This addiction choice is much more suited to the modern society with it's emphasis on mindless violence and disrespect of any sort of display of intelligence or reason.

Hmmm...

I think I might have asked you a question earlier on in this piece, but that seems so long ago...

Regards

Colin Ryan


P.S. I am truly sorry about soiling your page with this long winded and unsolicited posting.


message 24: by Sarah

Sarah Hi Chris, thank you for the friend request! (=


message 23: by Becca

Becca Hi Chris :D


Kelly/yllektra Thank you for adding me! :)


message 21: by Valerie

Valerie Sydney, eh? I got down there about twice or three times while I lived in Queensland (Rockhampton, mostly, but also on the coast between Yeppoon and Emu Park). I found Sydney cold. It even snowed there once when I was there. But then, I mostly got down there in the wintertime.

Anyway, I hope you like my reviews of other books.


Michelle hey Chris, thanks for the add :)


message 19: by Wendy

Wendy Thanks for the Friend Request... its nice to meet you!


message 18: by Jade

Jade Archer Hi Chris! Thank you for the friends invite. It's lovely to meet you here on Goodreads. All the best for a fabulous day and happy reading! :)


message 17: by Karen

Karen Gammons Thank you for the friend request, Chris. Have a wonderful week.
Karen


message 16: by Bonnie

Bonnie Hi Chris, thanks for the request. I hope you're having a great weekend.


message 15: by Neko

Neko Hi Chris, Thanks for the friends request :)


message 14: by Ed

Ed Rambeau Thanks for accepting my friend request, Chris. You seem like an interesting person, so feel free to tell me more about yourself and perhaps we can grow to become even greater friends. I, myself, am a singer/songwriter/actor who has recently turned author. My 2 top ten recordings were CONCRETE & CLAY (as a singer) and NAVY BLUE (as a writer)...both in the early 1960's.

Regards, and have a great day, Ed

http://www.edrambeau.com


message 13: by William

William O'Brien Hi Chris - Thank you for your friendship!
Please visit my website http://www.peteradarkenedfairytale.co.uk
to view a sample page and many other snippets about the book.
Expected release date Feb/Mar.
Best wishes, William


message 12: by Jonas

Jonas Saul Thanks for the add.

Daryl Sedore

[image error]


message 11: by Jesse

Jesse Hanson Want to thank you for including me among your friends, Chris. Wishing you the very best of luck with The Last Whale. jesse


message 10: by Bradley

Bradley Thank you for adding me as a friend. =)

Dreamsbane of Tamalor by Bradley James Simpson


message 9: by Ellen (last edited Nov 29, 2010 12:47PM)

Ellen Maze Hi Chris!
Thanks for the friend request! I see we both keep giving Stephen King a try...I haven't read his new ones but they're on my list!
Have a great day!
Ellen C Maze
Author Rabbit: Chasing Beth Rider


Mandapanda Hi Chris, thanks for the friend invite. I'll keep an eye out for your column in the Australian!


Rachel (The Rest Is Still Unwritten) Hi,
Thanks for the add :)
Take care and ttyl....

~Rachel


message 6: by BD

BD Hey
Thanks for the Friend's invite!


message 5: by Chris

Chris Going forward, at the end of the day' ... the world's biggest news cliches
http://player.video.news.com.au/theau...


Ang -PNR Book Lover Reviews Thank you for the Friend Invite :)


Zainab Hey, thanks for the add :)
Fellow aussie I see, haha.
tc


Stuart G'day Chris, All the best from good ol' Melbourne town!

Best, Stuart :)


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