Welcome to Nihil Alienum
Books and blogs by David Gormley-O'Brien
Spanning Federation, two world wars, the Depression, the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the Cowra Breakout, the British Commonwealth occupation of Japan and the long road to peace, the Becoming Australia series captures the humour, hardship, and humanity of ordinary Australians living in extraordinary times.
For readers who cherish meticulously researched historical fiction, An Attractive Naivety and Ashes and Sakura together form a vivid, unflinching, and ultimately hopeful account of Australia’s coming of age in the twentieth century.
What readers are saying
LisaA thoroughly enjoyable and educational read, there is no better way to learn about historical events than through the stories of people who experienced them. David has written a historically accurate and engaging account of events that have shaped our country. The way the characters lives' are intertwined and impacted throughout the novel keeps the reader engaged and enraptured (yes, I kept sneaking ahead to see what would happen). This would be a fabulous Australian history novel for students and for anyone wanting to immerse themselves into our past. If you liked A Town Like Alice...you will like this even more!
Manon BarbérisAshes and Sakura transports readers to post-war Japan and Australia, following the compelling stories of the characters first introduced in the first novel, An Attractive Naivety. Through their journeys, the reader discovers the ruins of Japan and the moral complexity of peace times. David Gormley-O’Brien once again gives us another brilliant history lesson, that I thoroughly enjoyed reading and vividly recommend!
Samantha RixonA moving multi-generational story spanning from the early to mid 1900s, with the characters experiencing some of the major milestones of the times. I cried, I laughed and learned a whole lot about Australian modern history along the way. I absolutely loved it.
Recent blog posts
The Diggers' Darling
Aboriginals in the Australian Constitution
Why were aboriginal natives not to be counted for constitutional purposes (section 127)?
Chapter 3 of An Attractive Naivety highlights the excitement in Sydney on New Year's Day, 1901, when people from all over New South Wales, and indeed from the other colonies and other parts of the world, came together to celebrate the birth of a new nation. It was a coming of age, where Australia would take up its place on the world stage. Its people would be both Australian and British.
Australian army nurses prisoners
In An Attractive Naivety, Armistice Darcy, a character inspired by Australian nurse, Betty Jeffrey, is one of 65 Australian army nurses evacuated from Singapore on 12 February 1942, just before its fall, on the SS Vyner Brooke. The following day, Friday the 13th, the ship was attacked by six Japanese bombers and sunk. Of those who made it to shore, 21 were savagely raped and murdered by Japanese soldiers on Radji Beach, Bangka Island.