Steph Bowe: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
[[Category:Australian women writers]] |
[[Category:Australian women writers]] |
||
[[Category:Living people]] |
[[Category:Living people]] |
||
[[http://www.stephbowe.com/]] |
Revision as of 16:48, 18 March 2015
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2015) |
Steph Bowe | |
---|---|
Born | |
Occupation(s) | Novelist and blogger |
Website | http://www.stephbowe.com/ |
Steph Bowe (born 1994 in Melbourne, Australia) is a writer and blogger.[1] Her blog receives about 12,000 hits per month.[1] She secured a book deal for her first novel Boy Saves Girl[1] in 2010, and it was a great success in Australia and New Zealand.[citation needed] This novel has also been traslated to other languages such as Spanish, Dutch and Catalan. Her second novel, All This Could End was published in 2013.[citation needed]
She has been at Melbourne Writers Festival, Brisbane Writers Festival, National Young Writers' Festival and the Emerging Writers Festival.[citation needed] She has been on two Australian radio programms: Triple J's Hack (radio program) and Radio National's Life Matters, and she has also appeared on TV (Jennifer Byrne Presents, The Circle and Totally Wild).[citation needed]
Girl Saves Boy
Girl Saves Boy was Bowe's debut novel. The principal character of the book, Sasha, is 17 years old, and he has a terminal disease, leukemia. He tries to commit suicide in a lake near his house, but Jewel, a young girl of his age saves him when he is going to commit suicide. Jewel is the other principal characters, and she has neither an easy life. Her brother died in the same lake in which Sasha tries to commit suicide; as a consequence, her parents left Jewel alone and she had to go to live with her grandparents. Her grandparents also died, so she had to go to live with her mother. But the relationship with her mother isn't very good. After meeting in the lake, Sasha and Jewel will start a special friendship, and they will discover that there are a lot of things that they can’t fight with. This story will speak about real friendship, love familiar conflicts… and also about garden gnomes.
References
- ^ a b c Carlton, Alexandra (21 April 2013). "The kids are all writers". Sydney Morning-Herald. Retrieved 18 March 2015.
[[1]]