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Celebrated political and social commentator Craig McGregor has spent his working life holding a mirror to Australian society.
In Left Hand Drive, he on his personal journey, writing about and living amidst some of the most compelling and events of modern times. From meeting his lifelong partner on a legendary ban-the-bomb march in the UK, listening to the unreleased Blonde on Blonde with an ‘attentive 'Bob Dylan, and following the twists and turns of Canberra’s corridors of power from Whitlam to Gillard, Left Hand Drive sees this two-time Walkey Award winner at full throttle.
Combining memoir, social commentary ,and musings from his private notebooks, McGregor charts the changing face of the nation while capturing much of what it means to be an Australian.
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Celebrated political and social commentator Craig McGregor has spent his working life holding a mirror to Australian society.
In Left Hand Drive, he on his personal journey, writing about and living amidst some of the most compelling and events of modern times. From meeting his lifelong partner on a legendary ban-the-bomb march in the UK, listening to the unreleased Blonde on Blonde with an ‘attentive 'Bob Dylan, and following the twists and turns of Canberra’s corridors of power from Whitlam to Gillard, Left Hand Drive sees this two-time Walkey Award winner at full throttle.
Combining memoir, social commentary ,and musings from his private notebooks, McGregor charts the changing face of the nation while capturing much of what it means to be an Australian.
Craig McGregor is a writer and academic whose career has spanned many years and many iterations. He started as a journalist in the early 60s, wrote books on contemporary Australia, became a freelance feature writer and an expert on pop culture (on Bob Dylan in particular), and wrote fiction and poetry.
Yet, above all, he was a critical observer of Australian society. As a journalist and feature writer, he was an active and enthusiastic commentator on Australian politics and his accounts of the Whitlam dismissal make for fascinating reading. He befriended Bob Dylan on one of his early tours of Australia and was invited to Bob’s room to listen to the first acetates of Blonde on Blonde … and he made a few suggestions. His most provoking observations, however, are on the inequalities of contemporary Australia and the power of entrenched vested interests.