A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Author Name:
 
Frances Hackney
Doctor of Sciences, artist, writer and musician. Her poems have been translated and published in English, Spanish, Bengali and Chinese. Frances is also a mother of six and calls Longueville, NSW home.
Clarence Hardy
Dr Hardy is an expert in the field of Atomic Energy. For the last 12 years he has been the honorary secretary of the Australian Nuclear Association and editor of its bimonthly newsletter Nuclear Australia.
Anne Harris
Historian Anne Harris is the author of three books: Abington, Lalor of Gubberamunda, and reprinted in 2006 Old Stations on the Gwydir.
Janetta Haskell
"I first met Janetta Haskell when I partnered her in Britten's THE TURN OF THE SCREW. She was an assured performer, an excellent musician and remains a good friend. Her full and interesting life makes a great read." Robert Gard OBE. "This story belongs to Australia as much as to Europe and Africa, to the domestic and personal as well as the great world of music and opera. Exceptional in its range of interest and experience, it documents an extraordinary life." - Vivian Smith
Helen Hayes
Her first full length work of non fiction is the biography of an Australian hero, Dr Geoff Cornish.
Simon Head
His first book took many years to develop: it's fiction but reads like it's real.
Leone Healy
Leone Healy, BA, a freelance writer and writing tutor, is a retired public servant who specialised in advocacy for people with disabilities. "Up!" shares her experiences of raising a deaf son in country NSW in the 60's and 70's. The lack of both services and understanding drove her to be a real mover and shaker. She set up services for deaf children, was the first woman voted on to Orange City Council and has a park named after her there. She raised community awareness of disability, the environment and feminism while teaching her deaf son, David, to talk. His first word was "Up"! David is now a Consultant for the Deaf in TAFE, a Social Work graduate, and has a Bachelor of Education.
Robert Heussler
'A Colonial Father', Fifteen years in the making, is the author's first book. This biography is a detailed account of the long and usefull life of Johann Christian Heussler from his 1820 birth in Bockenheim, near Frankfurt am Main, to his 1907 death in Brisbane. Heussler (pronounced Hoyssler by his descendants) was appointed Queenland's first Emigration Agent on the Continent of Europe.
Barbara Hilliard
Bedouin Treks is an intimate account of a year spent living under the Sharia Law in the remote Asir region of the Arabian desert which remains the extreme heart of Wahhabi fundamentalist Islam. Despite the risks for a single female, Hilliard is able to drive into the desert and meet the Bedouin in their homes where few had previously met a westerner. Barbara Hilliard is a linguist and now lives outside Sydney in the Blue Mountains.
Ron Hoskinson
Ron Hoskinson holds a PhD from the University of New South Wales. With that he worked a professional life doing research in the life sciences.
John Huntington
I have been a Valiant enthusiast since September 1962 when my father rolled home in a new S series Valiant. I was well schooled in Chrysler cars as the family S series was replaced by a 1964 Dodge Phoenix which in turn gave way to a VH Charger 770 and then a CH Chrysler by Chrysler Hardtop.