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THE DRESSMAKER

Rosalie Ham

After twenty years away, Myrtle "Tilly" Dunnage returns to Dungatar. Dungatar is a small country town, where the townspeople's eccentricities are many and varied - from Sergeant Farrat's predilection for cross-dressing, to pharmacist Almanac's retributive scheme of potion dispensing, not to forget the affairs and assorted dark secrets.

But none of these can compare to the sin of Tilly and her mother: to have come from somewhere else. At first ostracised, the townspeople gradually accept her in order to make use of her extraordinary dressmaking skills and at last, Tilly feels that she might have found home.

But small towns are strange places, where vanity rules and, once again reviled, she sets out to teach the town a lesson. In the process she faces the ghosts of her past, and wreaks a havoc that provides a most satisfying revenge.

Watch movie trailer under: https://www.facebook.com/TheDressmakerMovie/videos/vb.265178847002796/424255834428429/?type=2&theater&notif_t=notify_me_page

Rosalie Ham completed a Bachelor of Education, majoring in Drama and Literature (Deakin University, 1989), and achieved a Master of Arts, Creative Writing (RMIT, Melbourne) in 2007. Her first novel, The Dressmaker was published in 2000. Her second novel, Summer at Mount Hope was published in 2005. Rosalie has also had stories published in Meanjin, The Age, The Bulletin and Invisible Ink. When she is not writing, Rosalie teaches literature.
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Published 2000-09-01 by Duffy and Snellgrove

Comments

USA: Penguin; UK: Serpent's Tail; Czech: Mlada fronta; Dutch: Luitingh-Sijthoff; Greek: Enalios; Hungarian: PC Koenyvek Kft; Italian: Mondadori; Polish: Grupa Wydawnicza Foksal; Russian: AST; Spanish: Lumen; Turkish: Nemesis Kitap;

[...] it's clear we're visiting a small 1950s town not of history but as imagined by Tim Burton: the gothic, polarized world of "Edward Scissorhands." [...] Seeing the folks of Dungatar get their comeuppance in Ham's pictorial prose is a pleasure: They're cardboard villains to start with and have been allowed no emorse, and their punishment is as camp, ingenious and specific as anything Lemony Snicket ever devised. --- Kate Clanchy in The New York Times Read more...

Filming with Kate Winslett in the lead role has wrapped up: "Kate Winslet has been our ideal ‘Tilly': beautiful, strong, quick-witted, and even quicker with her period Singer sewing machine. The mother-daughter relationship between our ‘Molly', Judy Davis, and Tilly is authentic, moving and a joy to watch. To see these two great actresses working together on the screen has been electric and often hilarious." (Sue Maslin, Producer) Read more...