Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Blockade

Rate this book
Little Potoroo Creek is an area of pristine rainforest, housing many threatened plant and animal species. It's also the home of God and the place that Summer escapes to when she needs time out from living as a feral in the city. For Cheryl Bollok, Little Potoroo Creek is a beautiful place she can preserve in photographs and paintings before the loggers destroy it. When Cheryl meets God, she realises that sometimes you have to sacrifice everything you love to really make a difference. But it's her husband, Miklos Bollok, who is leading the loggers. When the loggers clash head-on with the ferals and greenies at the blockade, Cheryl's loyalties are tested to the limit.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1998

1 person is currently reading
34 people want to read

About the author

Derek Hansen

31 books45 followers
Derek was born in London in June 1944 about the same time Hitler thought London was a great place to send his V1 flying bombs.
At the age of four he convinced his parents to emigrate and spent the next sixteen years in Auckland being called a Pommy and a wimp for playing soccer and not rugby.
His first published short story appeared in his grammar school yearbook.
Equipped with a million ideas for novels he approached the leading national newspaper for a traineeship and was told he was too undisciplined; approached publishers and was told he was too young; approached an advertising agency and was welcomed into their embrace – they knew a fast, facile, fashionably glib mind when they saw one.
His talent took him London in the sixties where his quirky style and commercial instincts brought a rapid rise through the ranks to the country’s top advertising agency, accumulating many international awards along the way.
Derek was lured to Australia by the usual inducements – money, sunshine, money, lifestyle, money, etc – and spent the next twenty-five years doing ads and wishing he was writing novels instead.
About the time Bryce Courtenay wrote The Power of One and Peter Carey wrote Bliss, Derek and his partners sold their advertising agency and three years later he was free to pursue his true writing ambitions.
Having spent a lifetime reducing masses of information to less than 100 words or thirty seconds of TV time, working in exactly the opposite direction did not come easy.
An idea for a novel can be written on a folded napkin. What follows takes thousands of tablecloths.
One day over lunch Derek had the bright idea of breaking his novel down into more easily managed bite-sized pieces and so the idea for the Lunch series was born.
Lunch with the Generals became an instant bestseller in Australasia and was sold into Britain, Scandinavia, France and Germany. Lunch with Mussolini followed but it was Sole Survivor that piqued American interest.
Simon and Schuster decided to publish an American edition and Kennedy-Marshall (Sixth Sense, Snow Falling on Cedars) bought the rights to the movie on behalf of Disney in a $US750,000 deal.
Three weeks before the movie was due to go into production, shooting began on Castaway with Tom Hanks. Two movies about a man on an island surrounded by salt water was deemed one too many, and Sole Survivor the movie bit the dust. How typical of Hollywood to choose to make the wrong movie.
Derek has subsequently published a further five novels and three collections of short stories, but nothing quite as quirky or funny as his latest novel, A Man You Can Bank On.
Derek is married, has two grown-up children and lives most of the time in Avalon on Pittwater, and some of the time in Doonan on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast. Kingfish, salmon, bonito, bream and flathead live just outside his back door and the surf rises a short walk from the front door.
Someone had to have this life and Derek is just so glad that someone is him.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
17 (25%)
4 stars
23 (34%)
3 stars
23 (34%)
2 stars
4 (5%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Linda.
750 reviews
January 5, 2020
I normally love and devour Hansens books, but this one laboured with the concept and the over the top antics.
Profile Image for Debbie.
1,010 reviews
September 24, 2015
not what i usually read. its got a lot of carnage, with some romance thrown in
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.