Bronwyn Donaghy

Bronwyn Donaghy (21 December 1948 – 23 July 2002)[1] was an Australian author whose non-fiction work concerned adolescence, particularly drug use among teenagers, teen sexuality and teen suicide. Her 1996 book, Anna's Story, about the death of 15-year-old Sydney teenager Anna Wood, became a national bestseller. The book sold over 100,000 copies and was reprinted in 2005. Her other works included Leaving Early, about youth suicide, and Unzipped, about sexuality among teenagers.

Early life

Donaghy was born in Newcastle, New South Wales.[1] Her father worked as an insurance agent and the family moved often, spending large amounts of time in both Tamworth and Lismore. After her completion of high school, she trained as a journalist at Lismore's Northern Star newspaper and began her journalistic career.[1]

Career

After Donaghy's work in Lismore, she joined Network Ten in the late 1960s to work as a researcher and reporter.[1] She also presented Sunday Magazine and Young World. In the early 1970s, she travelled to England and began work in London, on trade publications.[1] She returned to Sydney in 1973. After a hiatus from journalism to prioritise her family and raise her children, she began freelance writing, specialising in family issues. Donaghy's work appeared in The Sydney Morning Herald, Australia's Parents magazine and New Woman.[1] Donaghy also wrote a long-standing column, under the pseudonym Frances Storm.[1]

In late 1995, Donaghy was approached by editor Jennie Orchard at Harper Collins to write a book about Anna Wood, who had died in October 1995. Wood had been at a rave with friends in Ultimo, where she had taken an ecstasy tablet and collapsed.[2] Her friends drove her to their home in Sydney's Northern Suburbs, where they put her to bed, hoping she would sleep off the effects of a bad pill. Unbeknown to them, Wood had suffered hyponatremia, dangerously low salt levels, as the result of excessive water consumption.[3] Her brain had swelled and she collapsed into a coma the following morning. Donaghy was reluctant to pursue the story, and approached the project with caution. After meeting Anna Wood's mother, Angela, she was struck by the normality of the family. Donaghy noticed the possibility of a recurrence which she felt would strike a chord with the Australian publicparticularly teenage girls. The book questions the duality of teenage freedom and parental restrictions, as well as Wood's portrayal of a wholesome, albeit slightly insecure and unsure girl next door. The book highlighted the urgency of a dialogue between parents and their children about illicit drug use, which was an issue of increasing importance in Australia at the timeup until Wood's death, there had only been one other reported death from ecstasy.[4]

Anna's Story was released in 1996 and became a best-seller. It was translated in German and sold in Europe.[5] In Australia, it has sold over 130,000 copies (2018). The success of the book led to Donaghy's covering of two other adolescent health issues: teenage depression and suicide, in Leaving Early (1997). Her following work, Unzipped: Everything Teenagers want to know about Love, Sex and Each Other (1999) was covered with a humorous approach. These three books are Donaghy's most well known works, however she published two more books in the 1990s: Keeping Mum: Stories of Happy Parenting and Other Lies, (1997), was a tongue-in-cheek book written as a guide for parents highlighting relationships and trust in teens and adults. Donaghy had also penned a children's fairy tale called Two and a Half Wishes.

Death

Donaghy was diagnosed with a bone marrow disorder (myelodisplesia/aplastic anaemia) in 1999 and became dependent on blood transfusions in 2002. Donaghy had been scheduled to receive a bone marrow transplant in August 2002. She passed away on 23 July 2002 surrounded by family.[1]

Personal life

Donaghy met her husband, Frank Donaghy, a Northern Irish physicist in London in the 1970s. They married in Sydney and had three children, Aidan, Anna and Liam.[1]

gollark: Or radians Celsius.
gollark: Just use degrees felsius.
gollark: Wireless charging?
gollark: Are there constraints on how much not-hemoglobin you can have other than how many blood cells will actually fit?
gollark: I imagine many would have more hemoglobin or whatever at least just to temporarily go in water.

References

  1. "Writer explored vexed issue of parents and teenagers". The Sydney Morning Herald. 7 August 2002. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  2. "Wood's drug death message falling on deaf ears, says her father Tony". The Advertiser (Adelaide). 29 November 2015.
  3. "The publicly released coroner's report/autopsy on Anna Wood's death". www.erowid.org. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
  4. "A date Amanda didn't live to keep", Sydney Morning Herald, 6 June 1991
  5. "Anna's Story (German edition)". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 5 May 2017.
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