Home Online Shopping Hot Topics News Events Culture Live to Eat Classifieds
    Sponsors

Sydney Symphony
Darling Harbour
Sydney Olympic Park
      From Shekki to Sydney: An Autobiography by Stanley Hunt

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries large numbers of Chinese travelled to the USA, Australia and other parts of the world to prospect for gold, or to work as labourers, gardeners and traders, but there are few eyewitness accounts of the lives of these people who predominantly came from South China. Stanley Hunt's From Shekki to Sydney fills part of that gap in Chinese and Australian social history by documenting his childhood in Shekki, his experiences after relocating to Australia, and the lives of his parents and grandparents. His story will resonate with those of many silent others all over the world.

Stanley Hunt was born Chan Pui-Tak in Shekki, Zhongshan county, Guangdong province, China. The Japanese had invaded North China, and were beginning to bomb Shekki and the nearby coastal areas of South China when he, his mother and two younger siblings, left home to join his father in Australia. Reunited in Sydney on 5 April 1939, the small family travelled north to the county town of Warialda where his father ran a general store. Australian troops were fighting in Europe and Asia, the country was still suffering lingering effects of the Great Depression, and his father was on the verge of bankruptcy. On the timely advice of a travelling salesman, his father was able to save himself from financial ruin by negotiating new terms for repaying his accounts.
 
Through times of rations and quotas, the family value-added to their limited supplies, worked very hard and paid off their debts before relocating to Sydney in early 1945. Stanley and his father acquired businesses and prospered. Stanley is recognised for his significant contributions to social and community work in Australia, and China.ĄD

The father worked in Australia and had only returned to Shekki a couple of times during the author's childhood: father and son were virtual strangers when they were reunited in Australia in 1939. As a twelve-year-old boy he began to work as a man alongside his father, and the development of their relationship contains many poignant moments that underscore the impact of "old country" traditions on a younger generation of Chinese maturing into adults in Australia. The author is a highly observant "outsider"as he grows from boy to man and is transformed into an "insider"......
 
If you are interested in the above abstract, please order your new Book :From Shekki to Sydney: An Autobiography by Stanley Hunt, 200 pp. including 42 black & white photographs. Softcover: AUS $37.50.

In Sydney, copies are now available at GLEEBOOKS at 49 Glebe Point Road, Glebe NSW 2037, phone (02) 9660 2333. www.gleebooks.com.au  EMAIL: books@gleebooks.com.au

Alternatively, the book can be ordered through local bookshops.

ISBN: 978 1 876957 15 5
Sydney: Wild Peony, September 2009
International distribution: University of Hawaii Press. www.uhpress.hawaii.edu



Sydney's top fashion model and artist on the move
Art Atrium: Keith Lane - In the Kingdom of Desire
Brett Bailey's latest painting at Art Atrium
Chinatown Historical Tours
THE SINGING COR ANGLAIS
Chinese Storytellers - My Stories
Edinburgh Military Tattoo returns to Sydney in 2010 with more bands including the Military Band of the People's Liberation Army of China
Transcendence artist William Yang talks about his
From Shekki to Sydney: An Autobiography by Stanley Hunt
Transcendence: Reflections of an East West Fusion

| Next | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42


Online Shopping
Miniature Outfit Face Washer
A$7.95
Miniature Outfit Face Washer
A$7.95
DVD Movies
Days of Being Wild
A$17.48
Spring Subway
A$12.5
  About us | Privacy | Advertising | Contact us | Newsletter | Testimonies | Shopping Guide | Tell a Friend | Wholesale  
© 1997 - 2009 Chinatown Communications Pty Ltd. Best viewed with IE 5.0 or above