Lin Van Hek

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Lin Van Hek
Linvanhek2011.jpg
Background information
Occupation(s)Artist, musician
Associated actsDifficult Women
Websitewww.linvanhek.com

Lin Van Hek (born Lyn Van Hecke) is an Australian writer, singer and artist. She is Vice-President of the Society of Women Writers and is the co-founder of the literary-music group Difficult Women.

Early life[]

Van Hek was born in Melbourne and lived in Europe and India while she was growing up.

Career[]

Van Hek co-wrote and sang the song "Intimacy" for the film, The Terminator.[1] She later recorded a solo CD River of Life featuring songs of New Zealand writer, . More recently, she has performed with her partner, Joe Dolce, and a team of post-feminist artists as Difficult Women, a live performance art team that began with a series of feminist literary salons van Hek held in the 1980s.[2]

She also worked for over two decades with a group of women in North Vietnam designing, manufacturing and trading in hand-embroidered silk garments and textiles with a focus on fair trade and worker ethics.[3]

She is a prolific painter and writer. She is described by Booker Prize-winning author Keri Hulme as writing "like an angel giving the devil her due."[4]

Awards[]

  • 1988 winner of the Melbourne The Age Short Story Award
  • 2015 Best Australian Poems, edited by Geoff Page.
  • 2016 & 2017 winner of the Society of Women Writers short story contest.

Bibliography[]

Novels[]

  • The Hanging Girl (Misfit Books, 1988)
  • The Ballad of Siddy Church (Spinifex, 1997)
  • Katherine Mansfield's Black Paper Fan (Difficult Women, 2010)

Short fiction[]

Collections
  • The Slain Lamb Stories (Independent, 1979)
  • Anna's Box : selected short stories (Difficult Women, 2006)
Stories
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected Notes
Mrs Black 2017 Van Hek, Lin (December 2017). "Mrs Black". Quadrant.

Book reviews[]

Year Review article Work(s) reviewed
2020 Van Hek, Lin (January–February 2018). "Poetry of wildness". Quadrant. 62 (1–2 [543]): 85–86. Petit, Pascale (2017). Mama Amazonica. Bloodaxe.

References[]

  1. ^ Sommerlad, Joe (1 July 2019). "SONY WALKMAN AT 40: HOW THE MILLION-SELLING GADGET TOOK MUSIC PORTABLE AND INSPIRED THE MIXTAPE". The Independent. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  2. ^ Talbot, Danielle (17 February 1995). "Difficult Women Have Their Day". The Age. Melbourne, Australia. p. 18.
  3. ^ staff. "Lin van Hek profile". Society of Women Writers: Victoria. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  4. ^ staff (1997). "The Ballad of Siddy Church". Feminist Bookstore News. 20: 104.

External links[]

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