Ann Howard (author)

Ann Howard (born 1942) is an Australian author[1] and journalist.

For other people by this name, see Ann Howard.

Ann Howard lives and writes on the Hawkesbury River, New South Wales. She has three sons, two grandsons and two granddaughters.

Bibliography

Non-fiction – business textbooks

Design an e-business Promote and Support Innovation and Change Implement and Monitor Delivery of Quality Customer Service Online 1-74123-059-3

  • Show Leadership, In the Workplace
  • Manage Personal Work Priorities
  • How to Write Complex Documents –

Non-fiction historical

A Carefree War BigSky Publishing

  • Roads and Highways 0850910587
  • Australia in WWI 085835 643 0
  • Australia in WWII 085835 645 7
  • Cattle Drovers 085835 548 5
  • Coaches, Riverboats and Railways 085835 546 9
  • Women in Australia 085835
  • From Colonies to Commonwealth 085835 646 5
  • A Century of 'Life' MML 1895–1995 0 9595984 1 3
  • A Ghost, a Murder & Other Dangar Tales 978-0-9585843-4-0

Books – publisher

  • You'll Be Sorry! 073168091 X Tarka
  • Where Do We Go From Here? 064602138 9 Tarka
  • After Barnardo 1 0-646-35113-3
  • C'mon Over!

Books – contributor

  • Haunted Encounters
  • The Artist's Garden
  • Grolier Encyclopaedia
  • Up From Below – Poems from the 80's Redress Press Sydney
  • Australian Short Stories

Periodicals – contributor

ANCR

  • 24 Hours FM
  • Look – Art Gallery of New South Wales Society Journal
  • PC Weekly
  • Power Farming
  • Primary Education
  • Quadrant
  • SCAN (in-house ABC magazine)
  • Simply Living
  • Terra (USA)
  • True Blue
  • Vogue Living
  • Working (in-house Public Works magazine)
  • Narcissus
  • Aspect
  • What's New in Waste Management?

Short stories

  • A Blaze of Glory in Australian Short Stories
  • Quadrant – The Deckchair, The Bonsai Ballerina, Clive of India. Leila's Patch, Two Heartbeats and a Step Away, The Rules of Rain, Belles, Bottles and Heartstrings. In Loving Memory

Keen Publications, New York The Emerald Light

gollark: A gecke.
gollark: It is CLEARLY a gecko.
gollark: Gecki or gecken, I guess.
gollark: Can we make the esolangs plural of gecko *officially* gecki?
gollark: But this is photorealistic.

References

  1. Lowe, Iris (2003). "C'mon Over: Voluntary Child Migrants from Tilbury to Sydney, 1921 to 1965 (Book Review)". Journal of Australian Studies. 79: 202–204. This latest work by established author and historian Ann Howard looks at a little- known category of Australian immigrants: children who migrated ....


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