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Uncle David

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Uncle David's proportions grow larger each time his nephew describes him to friends

48 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 1993

12 people want to read

About the author

Libby Gleeson

63 books38 followers
"I was born in Young, a small town in south western NSW in 1950. After a few years we moved to Glen Innes, on the northern tablelands and then when I was ten we moved out west to Dubbo. We moved because my father was a schoolteacher and each change meant a promotion for him.

There were six children in the family. I was number three and there wasn't a lot of money. We didn't have television and of course there was no such thing as a computer.

Books and reading were hugely important. I remember going to the library on a Saturday morning and borrowing five or six books and reading them all by Sunday night.

When I finished High School I studied at the University of Sydney. I had a great time studying mainly history but also getting involved in lots of things happening at the University and the city. It was the time of the anti-Vietnam war protests and the rise of the Women's Movement.

I taught for two years in a small town, Picton, which is just outside of Sydney. I really enjoyed that time but I wanted to travel and in 1976 I headed off for five years. I based myself first in Italy where I taught English and then in London where I started writing my first novel, Eleanor, Elizabeth. I attended a creative writing group where the other students pushed me to write a better book. In London I also met my husband. We came back to Sydney in 1980. We've got three daughters.

When we first came back I taught at the University of NSW but now I write full-time. I've written thirty books and I've also taught occasional courses in creative writing and I've visited lots of schools to talk about my work.

I write picture books, novels for young kids and also novels for slightly older readers. I've done a book about writing and also a small amount of writing for television: Bananas in Pyjamas and Magic Mountain.

The writer's life is pretty good. It's a job where you work for yourself, in your daggy track suit, at times that suit you. What more could you ask for?"

from: http://www.libbygleeson.com.au/biogra...

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
1,095 reviews21 followers
December 9, 2011
It's a terrible thing to admit that sometimes you don't understand a picture book. I've read this a few times now, and I don't know that I get it yet. It's about tall stories, and how stories grow they as they are passed around. Ned boasts that his Uncle David is a giant, that he can lift six children at once. Then Uncle David in reality does seem to be an actual giant, living in a monastery like building, with multiple joints of meat in his fridge.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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