Helen Trinca has co-written two previous books: Waterfront: The Battle that Changed Australia and Better than Sex: How a Whole Generation Got Hooked on Work. She has held senior reporting and editing roles in Australian journalism, including a stint as the Australian's London correspondent, and is currently Managing Editor of the Australian. Her biography of Madeleine St John was published in 2013 and was awarded the 2014 Prime Minister's Literary Award for Non-Fiction.
'The vibrant and witty prose of Australian novelist Madeleine St John belies a sombre and troubled soul according to this new biography, which delves into the writer's fragile psyche...This insightful study pays homage to a gifted, but underrated author.' * Lady * `A rich and moving account of a difficult life redeemed by art.' * Independent on Sunday * 'It is a credit to Trinca's research and the empathy she displays in this fine biography of a difficult woman that at the end the reader goes to the shelves and takes out the copies of St John's books.' * Sydney Review of Books * `[Madeleine] isn't merely a history of a singular writer, it is also a trenchant interrogation of a period and a country.' * Monthly * 'Expertly researched and fair in its portrayal...[Trinca's prose] is able to masterfully conjure the affluence of 1950s Sydney, its lonely housewives and lost migrants, as well as the shabby chic of 60s London and its bohemian share houses, head with casual sex and marijuana.' * Readings Monthly * `Madeleine is a joy...Moving, frustrating, fascinating: Madeleine is a wonderful book. One thinks St John might have appreciated its elegance, at least. Though she would have hated it, of course; which is to say Trinca has told her story scrupulously, and well.' * Delia Falconer, Weekend Australian * '[A] brilliant biography.' * Australian Women's Weekly *