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Eric Rolls
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Eric Charles Rolls AM (1923–2007) was an Australian writer.[1]

Key Information

Life

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Rolls was born in Grenfell, New South Wales in 1923, and died in Camden Haven in 2007.[2] He attended the Sydney selective school of Fort Street High, before serving in the second world war in New Guinea,[1] as a signaller.[3] On his return from the war, he took up land in 1946 in the north-west of New South Wales (east of the Pilliga and later at "Cumberdeen", Baradine)[4] and farmed and wrote,[1] often spending long periods in Sydney, researching at the Mitchell Library.[4]

He had two happy marriages, the first with Joan Stephenson and after her death in 1985,[5] a second with Elaine van Kempen (1937–2019),[6] whom he met when she came to work for him in 1985 as his research assistant,[7] and married in 1988.[3]

Work

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One of his most celebrated works is A Million Wild Acres of which Tom Griffiths (emeritus professor of history at the Australian National University) wrote:

"(Les) Murray considered A Million Wild Acres to be like an extended, crafted campfire yarn in which everyone has the dignity of a name, and in which the animals and plants have equal status with humans in the making of history: “It is not purely human history, but ecological history he gives us… one which interrelates the human and non-human dimensions so intimately.” Murray compared its discursive and laconic tone to the Icelandic sagas. Through his democratic recognition of all life, Rolls enchanted the forest and presented us with a speaking land, a sentient country raucous with sound."[8]

Rolls' papers and sound recordings, including an interview with Hazel de Berg, are held by the National Library of Australia.[9]"Miss Strawberry's Purse" was his most popular verse.

Publications

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Eric Rolls Memorial Lecture

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Funded by his widow, Elaine van Kempen, the Eric Rolls Memorial Lecture was inaugurated in 2010 as a biannual lecture.[10]

2010: "Fire in 1788: The closest ally" by Bill Gammage[11]

2012: "A Meander Down a River or Two: How Water Defines Our Continent and Its Future" by Richard Kingsford[12]

2014: "The Landscape Behind the Landscape" by Nicholas Rothwell[13]

2016: "Gifts from China" by Nicholas Jose[14]

2018: "Mother Earth" by Bruce Pascoe[15]

Honours

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References

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