Ann Howard (author)
- For other people by this name, see Ann Howard.
Ann Howard (born 1942) is an Australian author[1] and journalist.
Ann Howard lives and writes on the Hawkesbury River, New South Wales with her partner Robert Bickerstaff. She has three sons, two grandsons and two granddaughters.
Bibliography
Non-fiction – business textbooks
Design an e-business Promote and Support Innovation and Change Implement and Monitor Delivery of Quality Customer Service Online 1-74123-059-3
- Show Leadership, In the Workplace
- Manage Personal Work Priorities
- How to Write Complex Documents -
Non-fiction historical
A Carefree War BigSky Publishing
- Roads and Highways 0850910587
- Australia in WWI 085835 643 0
- Australia in WWII 085835 645 7
- Cattle Drovers 085835 548 5
- Coaches, Riverboats and Railways 085835 546 9
- Women in Australia 085835
- From Colonies to Commonwealth 085835 646 5
- A Century of 'Life' MML 1895-1995 0 9595984 1 3
- A Ghost, a Murder & Other Dangar Tales 978-0-9585843-4-0
Books – publisher
- You'll Be Sorry! 073168091 X Tarka
- Where Do We Go From Here? 064602138 9 Tarka
- After Barnardo 1 0-646-35113-3
- C'mon Over!
Books – contributor
- Haunted Encounters
- The Artist's Garden
- Grolier Encyclopaedia
- Up From Below - Poems from the 80's Redress Press Sydney
- Australian Short Stories
Periodicals – contributor
ANCR
- 24 Hours FM
- Look - Art Gallery of New South Wales Society Journal
- PC Weekly
- Power Farming
- Primary Education
- Quadrant
- SCAN (in-house ABC magazine)
- Simply Living
- Terra (USA)
- True Blue
- Vogue Living
- Working (in-house Public Works magazine)
- Narcissus
- Aspect
- What's New in Waste Management?
Short stories
- A Blaze of Glory In Australian Short Stories
- Quadrant - The Deckchair, The Bonsai Ballerina, Clive of India. Leila's Patch, Two Heartbeats and a Step Away, The Rules of Rain, Belles, Bottles and Heartstrings. In Loving Memory
Keen Publications, New York The Emerald Light
References
- ↑ Lowe, Iris (2003). "C'mon Over: Voluntary Child Migrants from Tilbury to Sydney, 1921 to 1965 (Book Review)". Journal of Australian Studies 79: 202–204.
This latest work by established author and historian Ann Howard looks at a little- known category of Australian immigrants: children who migrated ....
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