Hal Colebatch (author)

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Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch
Born(1945-10-07)7 October 1945
Perth, Western Australia
Died10 September 2019(2019-09-10) (aged 73)
Perth, Western Australia
OccupationAuthor, poet, lecturer, journalist, editor, and lawyer
NationalityAustralian
GenreScience fiction and history

Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch (7 October 1945 – 10 September 2019) was a West Australian author, historian, poet, lecturer, journalist, editor, and lawyer.

Biography

Colebatch was the son and biographer

Fremantle mayor and parliamentarian Sir Frank Gibson, and had served as an Australian Army
nursing sister.

He graduated BA Hons and MA in History/Politics and PhD in Political Science from the University of Western Australia. He later attained degrees in law and jurisprudence.

Colebatch nominated as a candidate in the 1977 and 1993 state elections for the seat of Perth as the Liberal candidate, and although he was not elected to the Legislative Assembly on either occasion, on the second attempt he came within 0.12% of winning the seat from the Australian Labor Party, which had held it since 1968.[2]

Hal G. P. Colebatch is not to be confused with author Dr Hal K. Colebatch[3] who was born in 1944 and has taught political science at several universities.

Writing

Colebatch's work includes eight volumes of poetry (starting with Spectators on the Shore in 1975), and a series of 18 science-fiction stories published in the US in the

heroic fantasy including The Lord of the Rings, Star Wars and Harry Potter, and he contributed several articles to the J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopaedia; Scholarship and Critical Assessment. He wrote biographies of Sir Victor Garland and the late Sir Stanley Argyle
.

Colebatch also edited many books, including Lucky Ross, written by John Ross, an Australian Navy officer who was transferred out of

Lord Robert Baden-Powell as characters. Counterstrike has been described in The American Spectator Online and the Perth Record as a "thriller of ideas, one of the first books to grapple with the problems of false and manufactured counter-knowledge." (9 July 2011) Time Machine Troopers has been described as "better than Wells" and "a subversion of Wells".[by whom?
] In 2011 Picaro Press published his small "chapbook" of poetry, The Age of Revolution, No. 113 in its Wagtail Poets series.

Poetry

Many of his poems concern Perth and its suburbs, the Swan River and Rottnest Island, as well as travels in Britain, Asia, the Middle East and elsewhere. His poetry, which has won various prizes, is in both free-verse and highly structured forms including sonnets and sestinas.

Colebatch was described by Peter Alexander, Professor of English at the University of New South Wales, in his biography of Les Murray, as being among Australia's best writers.[citation needed]

His seventh book of poetry, The Light River, with a foreword by Les Murray, was published by Connor Court Publishing in 2007. In the foreword Murray stated that Colebatch's work had been unjustly suppressed by the Australian literary establishment because of his refusal to join poetic cliques. This book contains, among other works, the long narrative poem The San Demetrio, telling of the salvaging of a burning petrol-tanker at sea in World War II, and a poem It, on the return of terrorism. The long poem Red-Head with Phosphorus is a romantic love story. His poems are included in about 25 anthologies. The Light River was awarded the West Australian Premier's literary prize for poetry in 2008.

Other activities

When working as a reporter on The West Australian in the early 1970s, Colebatch made several trips to the Kimberley to report on the construction and filling of the Ord River Dam and associated animal rescues with naturalist Harry Butler, a long-time friend. He was also involved in exploring several kilometres of extensions to Easter Cave in the south-west of Western Australia. Many scenes in Man-Kzin Wars X: The Wunder War, and subsequent volumes, are set in caves and caverns, reflecting his knowledge of the subject.

Hobbies included sailing, war-gaming and underwater photography, especially at the reefs around Rottnest Island. He spent much of 1973, 1983–84 and 1997–98 in Britain, the Middle East and Europe. He also worked for the Australian Institute for Public Policy, the "dry" think-tank established by John Hyde, former MHR for Moore; and engineering tycoon Harold Clough; Debrett's publications (as managing editor) and on the staff of two federal ministers – the Hon. Sir Victor Garland and Senator the Hon. Chris Ellison. He ran his own law practice after completing articles with Stone James in Perth.

Colebatch tutored in creative writing at Curtin University, political science at the University of Western Australia, torts and contract law at Curtin University, and lectured in international law at Edith Cowan University and University of Notre Dame Australia. He was also a co-author of a book on traffic law in Western Australia, published in 2007 with Barrister Patrick Mugliston and former police sergeant Stewart Ainsworth. He had a volume of short stories accepted for publication by Acashic, and wrote a short film, Fiddler's Green.

His book Australia's Secret War won the 2014 Prime Minister's Literary Award for history, attracting significant controversy due to accusations of political bias.[6] Among the judges for the award were Gerard Henderson and Peter Coleman. The book details strikes and purported sabotage by left-wing unions during World War II, although many of his examples were criticised for inaccuracy or for relying on unsubstantiated statements by individual servicemen.[7]

Death

Colebatch died unexpectedly in September 2019 during a stay in a Perth hospital.[8]

Bibliography

Fiction

  • "The Colonel's Tiger" in Man-Kzin Wars VII, Baen, 1995.
  • Man-Kzin Wars X: The Wunder War, Baen, 2003.
  • Counterstrike, Acashic, 2011.
  • Time Machine Troopers, Acashic, 2011.
  • Freedom: A Man-Kzin Novel (2020, with Jessica Q. Fox)

Poetry

Collections
List of poems
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected
Castle in Lebanon 1996 Colebatch, Hal (March 1996). "Castle in Lebanon". Quadrant. 40 (3 [324]): 62.
Weekday 1996 Colebatch, Hal (March 1996). "Weekday". Quadrant. 40 (3 [324]): 62.
Janice B. 2018 Colebatch, Hal G. P. (January–February 2018). "Janice B.". Quadrant. 62 (1–2 [543]): 86.

Non-fiction

Book reviews

Year Review article Work(s) reviewed
2018 Colebatch, Hal G. P. (January–February 2018). "Unreasonable reasoning". Quadrant. 62 (1–2 [543]): 83–85. Kreeft, Peter (2006). Socrates meets Descartes : the Father of Philosophy analyzes the Father of Modern Philosophy's Discourse on Method. Ignatius Press.

References

  1. ^ Colebatch, Hal G. P. (April 2005). Steadfast Knight, with foreword by Geoffrey Blainey. Fremantle Arts Centre Press.
  2. .
  3. University of NSW
    . Retrieved 6 April 2020
  4. ^ Colebatch, Hal G.P. (21 September 2009). "Thought police muscle up in Britain". The Australian. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
  5. ^ "Contributors – Hal Colebatch". The American Spectator. Archived from the original on 23 December 2009. Retrieved 30 January 2010.
  6. ^ Toscano, Nick. Prime Minister's Literary Awards panel accused of political bias. The Sydney Morning Herald, 9 December 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2020
  7. ^ Stanley, Peter. Who are the liars? Response to Colebatch, at http://honesthistory.net.au, 17 December 2014. Retrieved 6 April 2020
  8. ^ The Formidable, Unturnable Hal Colebatch, Quadrant, 20 September 2019
  9. ^ Poprzeczny, Joe (7 December 2004). "Joe Poprzeczny: State Scene – Hal Colebatch's influence lives on". WA Business News. Retrieved 30 January 2010.[dead link]

Further reading

  • Tony Thomas, "Hal Colebatch", Quadrant, October 2013, pp. 59–63.

External links