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Published 26 April 2012
ISBN 9781921921766
Format EBook
Extent 320pp

The Commandant: Text Classics



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The penal colony of Moreton Bay is under the command of Patrick Logan, a man not afraid of brutal discipline. But his rule is being questioned and the arrival of his sister-in-law Frances will change everything.

The Commandant, with an introduction by Carmen Callil, is an unforgettable tale of power, duty and humanity.

'Quietly astonishing: enthrals, entertains and gratifies on every level.' Helen Garner


Jessica Anderson was born in Gayndah, Queensland, in 1916. Anderson wrote stories and adapted novels for radio before she published her first novel, An Ordinary Lunacy, in 1963. In 1978, she won the Miles Franklin Literary Award for Tirra Lirra by the River, and again in 1980 for The Impersonators, which also won the Christina Stead Prize for Fiction. In 1987 her story collection, Stories from the Warm Zone, won the Age Book of the Year award.


Carmen Callil founded Virago Press in 1972 and later became managing director of Chatto & Windus and the Hogarth Press. Since 1995 she has worked as a writer and critic. She is the author of Bad Faith: A Forgotten History of Family and Fatherland, and co-author, with Colm Toibin, of The Modern Library: The 200 Best Novels in English since 1950.

Published 26 April 2012
ISBN 9781921921766
Format EBook
Extent 320pp

About the author

Jessica Anderson

Jessica Anderson has published six novels and a collection of short stories, and has also written a number of plays and adaptations for radio. Her novels have won numerous awards and sold well in America and England, as well as being translated into several European languages. Jessica Anderson was born in Brisbane in 1916, and apart from a few years in Europe during her youth, she has spent most of her life in Sydney, where she still lives. Tirra Lirra by the River (1978) won The Miles Franklin Award. The Impersonators (1980) won The Miles Franklin and the NSW Premier's Awards. Stories from the Warm Zone and Sydney Stories (1987) won the Age Book of the Year.