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OverviewThe Ginger Jar is a story of coming of age and love, of family ties and tensions. Although the ginger jar is broken in Cairo, its story began in Vancouver. Kit is taken by her older cousin, Charles Gilbert, to lunch in Vancouver's Chinatown. There Charles, after telling her he plans to take off for China when the coming summer is over, buys her the ginger jar. Of all the family, they have the most in common. Charles finds Kit, like himself, intuitive and creative. That summer of 1929, the families set up camp at Cedar Cove. There with her family, with Charles around, and her favourite cousin Greta, Kit is restless.From the time Jimmy Millar, a young science student, and a beauty called Pat, join the weekends at the beach, the circle of Kit's life seems different. Drama explodes at Cedar Cove when Greta is seduced and Pat chooses Charles Gilbert.After the Depression, happily engaged to Jimmy Millar, Kit envisions a wonderful future of travel. But Jimmy asks her to postpone their wedding. Kit accepts a summer job on Vancouver Island. In this idyllic place Kit is made welcome and makes new friends. Charles, now established with his wife, Pat, and their baby son, visits her at the lake. Their closeness develops into passion.Again, a summer ends in drama. Charles takes his son and goes into hiding; Kit is torn between Charles and Jimmy and her love for them both. Sailing back to the safety of her home, Kit is suddenly confronted by Pat Gilbert, who is waiting for her on the ferry. There is no escape. Kit is no longer the innocent and trusting girl she was. So it is here the ginger jar takes over again and ends the story. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Kathryn PurnellPublisher: J R Garran Imprint: J R Garran Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.467kg ISBN: 9781764258401ISBN 10: 1764258401 Pages: 348 Publication Date: 15 October 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationKathryn Purnell embodied the soul and spirit of a creative writer. She maintained an intense interest in everything around her, the natural and spiritual worlds, the everyday and the eternal, diverse countries and their cultures as well as the human condition (of which she had an uncanny understanding). A gifted educator, she was an inspiration to many aspiring writers to whom she taught creative writing. She believed intensely in the need to encourage women writers, the constraints on whom she felt herself at a very personal level.Born in Vancouver, Canada in 1911 and baptised Catherine Isabell (Maxwell), she later morphed her personal names into Kathryn Isobel for reasons never clearly evident. Travelling by sea to Australia with her family as a young woman she met on board and later married scientist William (Bill) Purnell. In a marriage that lasted 72 years the partnership of two highly intelligent but very different personalities was not always smooth, but that notwithstanding the union delivered Kathryn a wealth of opportunity for international experiences rare for most living in those times.Bill Purnell's work in the early years of UNESCO, as head of its Science Cooperation Division, took Kathryn to Paris to live in the early post war years, then to Cairo and later Jakarta. She travelled widely in Europe and later spent time in South Africa where her younger daughter lived for a time.When her husband's ill health compelled the family to return permanently to Australia in the late nineteen fifties, Kathryn maintained her international links through involvement with the United Nations Association, and her work with women through the YWCA. It was particularly in this period of her life, with the common pressures of maintaining a family, supporting a husband in his professional life and finding time to create, that she felt most strongly the constraints and limitations placed on the female creative spirit by the societal practices and beliefs of the time. But create she did, both poetry and prose work. She also spent much of her time teaching aspiring writers, mostly women. Active in the Society of Women Writers, in 1998 she won The Alice Award, a biennial award for long term and distinguished contribution to literature by an Australian woman. Previous winners have included Eleanor Dark, Judith Wright, Mary Durack and Nancy Cato. After Kathryn's death the Society of Women's Writers Victoria set up the biennial Kathryn Purnell Poetry Prize in her memory. Other awards over the years included the State of Victoria Short Story Award and the Moomba Short Story Prize in 1966/67, The Society of Women Writers Poetry Prize in 1972, Maryborough Poetry Prize in 1975, an award in the Geelong Arts Festival 1976 and in 1979 she was the inaugural winner of the Charles Meeking Poetry Award for women. A resident of the suburb, in the early nineties Kathryn was appointed East Melbourne Writer in Residence. During this appointment she edited ""The Beautiful Hill: An Anthology of Writing from East Melbourne"", a collection of short essays and poems written by local identities.In addition to her poetry, Kathryn left a fine legacy of prose writings, much of it unpublished. A current project is redressing this by publishing some of her novellas, short stories and her singular novel, the latter a fascinating story, with autobiographical undertones, covering the life of a young girl growing up in early twentieth century Vancouver, yet stretching to Cairo in the fifties. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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