Books and blogs by David Gormley-O'Brien

Spanning Federation, two world wars, the Depression, the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the Cowra Breakout, the British Commonwealth occupation of Japan and the long road to peace, the Becoming Australia series captures the humour, hardship, and humanity of ordinary Australians living in extraordinary times.

For readers who cherish meticulously researched historical fiction, An Attractive Naivety and Ashes and Sakura together form a vivid, unflinching, and ultimately hopeful account of Australia’s coming of age in the twentieth century.

What readers are saying

5 star Ashes and sakura

Enjoyed Ashes & Sakura.

Had a feel of authenticity of the era and an intriguing array of motivations/emotions of service personnel, families and individuals.

Economical approach - author chose not to wax lyrical about scenery, reflections and philosophical contemplation that some authors do (suits me!)

Thanks for shedding light on the little described time.

Bruce
5 star An Attractive Naivety

A moving multi-generational story spanning from the early to mid 1900s, with the characters experiencing some of the major milestones of the times. I cried, I laughed and learned a whole lot about Australian modern history along the way. I absolutely loved it.

Samantha Rixon
5 star Ashes and sakura

I really liked this way of learning about Australia's history. There is such a beauty to the characters in the book, their passions, love and tenderness. The lightness on character depth allowed me to remember that this story is actually about real events in history and real experiences and dilemmas. Meanwhile those reflections on the last page stay with me still.

Anna Haines

Reviews on Goodreads

Read all reviews

Recent blog posts

Subscribe to newsletter

If you would like to receive monthly updates about David Gormley-O'Brien's blogs, books, news, and upcoming events, please subscribe to the monthly newsletter. You can unsubscribe at any time.
The subscriber's email address.
CAPTCHA
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.