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Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch

Born in October 7, 1945 / Australia / English

Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch poet from Australia was born on October 7, 1945 has 78 years. Poems were written mainly in English language. Dominant movement is political.

Biography

Hal Gibson Pateshall Colebatch (born 7 October 1945), also known as Hal G. P. Colebatch and Hal Colebatch is an Australian author, poet, lecturer, journalist, editor, and lawyer.

Personal History

He is the son of the late Australian politician Sir Hal Colebatch and Marion, Lady Colebatch, a former Australian Army nursing sister who was the daughter of long-time Fremantle mayor and parliamentarian Sir Frank Gibson. He is the author of Sir Hal Colebatch's biography, Steadfast Knight (foreword by Professor Geoffrey Blainey), published by the Fremantle Arts Centre Press.

He received a BA Honours and MA in History/Politics and a PhD in Political Science from the University of Western Australia as well as degrees in jurisprudence and law.

He was awarded an Australian Centenary Medal in 2003 for writing, law, poetry and political commentary, the only award for this combination of activities. He has also received an award from the Vietnamese community in Perth for work for Vietnamese refugees and was chairman of the Victoria League for Commonwealth Friendship in Western Australia 2003-2006. He has written a centenary history of the league "Good work and Friendship" (2010). He was a keynote speaker at the "Summersounds" colloquiums held at Blenheim, New Zealand, in June, 2008, and in Nelson, New Zealand, in 2009. He delivered a lecture "How Red are the Greens?" to the Melbourne Adam Smith Club in November 2010. He previously served in the Australian Naval Reserve Cadets and reached the rank of Petty Officer.

Colebatch also stood in the 1977 and 1993 state elections for the seat of Perth as the Liberal Party candidate, and although he was not elected to the Legislative Assembly on either occasion, on the second attempt he came within 0.12% of winning the seat from the Australian Labor Party, who had held it since 1968. He received a commenoratove award in honour of Prince Micheal Romanov of Russia, one of 88 struck.

Writing

As well as Steadfast Knight, his work includes eight volumes of poetry (starting with Spectators on the Shore in 1975), a series of science-fiction stories published in the US in the series The Man-Kzin Wars, created by Larry Niven, in which he has created several original characters including Dimity Carmody, Nils Rykerman and Vaemar-Riit He has now had 18 stories published or accepted in the series, totalling about 600,000 words. He has also had books published of political, social, legal and economic commentary. He was described in Penguin's "A New Literary History of Australia" published in 1988, as having has "a quiet but steady career" in Australian poetry at that time. He writes regularly for a number of publications including Quadrant and his 1999 book Blair's Britain was chosen in The Spectator (London) as a Book of the Year. He also writes for The American Spectator Online, op-ed articles for The Australian and occasional pieces for other publications including The Australian Financial Review, IPA Review The Salisbury Review and The New Criterion. He also writes regular book-reviews and other features for The West Australian and The Record in Perth. His Return of the Heroes is a study of heroic fantasy including The Lord of the Rings, Star Wars and Harry Potter, and he has contributed several articles to the J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopaedia; Scholarship and Critical Assessment. He has also edited many books including "Lucky Ross", written by John Ross, an Australian Naval Officer who was transferred out of HMAS Sydney 19 days before it was sunk with all hands in November 1941. He has written commissioned histories of the Parents' and Friends Association in Western Australia and The Victoria League in Western Australia. He has recently published two novels with publishing firm Acashic - "Counterstrike" set in and off Western Australia in the near future, and "Time Machine Troopers", a sequel to H. G. Wells's "The Time Machine", set in 802719 and featuring Wells himself, Winston Churchill, H. G. Wells and Lord Robert Baden-Powell as characters. "Counterstrike" has been described in The American Spectator Online and the Perth "Record" as a "thriller of ideas, one of the first books to grapple with the problems of false and manufactured counter-knowledge." (9 July 2011)"Time Machine Troopers" has been described as "better than Wells" and "a subversion of Wells." His latest book is a small "chapbook" of poetry with Picaro Press, "The Age of Revolution", No. 113 in its Wagtail Poets series.

When working as a reporter on The West Australian, Colebatch had several trips to wild country in the Kimberleys to report on the construction and filling of the Ord Dam and associated animal rescues with Naturalist Harry Butler, a long-time friend. He was also involved in exploring several kilometers of extensions to Easter Cave in the South-West opf Westernm Australia. His hobbies include sailing, war-gaming and underwater photography, especially at the reefs around Rottnest Island. He spent much of 1973, 1983-84 and 1997-98 in Britain, the Middle-East and Europe. He has also worked for the Australian Institute for Public Policy, the "dry" think-tank established by John Hyde, former MHR for Moore, and engineering tycoon Harold Clough, Debrett's publications (as managing editor) and on the staff of two Federal Ministers - the Hon. Sir Victor Garland and the Hon. Senator Chris Ellison. He has also run his own Law practice, after completing articles with Stone James in Perth.

He has tutored in Creative Writing at Curtin University,Political Science at the University of Western Australia, torts and contract law at Curtin University and lectured in internstional law at Edith Cowan Univerdity and Notre Dame University. He was offered an adjunct professorship but was unable to take it up.

Many of his poems concern Perth and its suburbs, the Swan River and Rottnest Island, as well as travels in Britain, Asia, the Middle East and elsewhere. His poetry, which has won various prizes, is in both free-verse and highly structured forms including sonnets and sestinas.

He was described by Peter Alexander, Professor of English at the University of New South Wales, in his biography of Les Murray, as being among Australia's best writers. Man-Kzin Wars XII, containing three more stories by Colebatch (two written in collaboration with M. J. Harrington) was published in February 2009.

His seventh book of poetry, The Light River, with a foreword by Les Murray was published by Connor Court Publishing in 2007. In the foreword Murray stated that Colebatch's work had been unjustly suppressed by the Australian literary establishment because of his refusal to join poetic cliques. This book contains, among other works, the long narrative poem "The San Demetrio," telling of the salvaging of a burning petrol-tanker at sea in World War II, and a poem "It" on the return of terrorism. The long poem "Red-Head with Phosphorus" is a romantic love story. He is also co-author of a book on traffic law in Western Australia published in 2007 with Barrister Patrick Mugliston and former police sergeant Stewart Ainsworth. The Light River was awarded the West Australian Premier's literary prize for poetry in 2008. He is at present writing the official biography of "Bert" Kelly, MHR.

His published prose books include Caverns of Magic (Cybereditions, 2006), a survey of caves in myth, legend and story, and of the development of speleology. As a reporter on The West Australian, Colebatch was involved in the discovery of several kilometers of extensions to Easter Cave in the south-west of Western Australia. The book has a foreword by naturalist and conservationist Harry Butler. (Many scenes in Man-Kzin Wars X: The Wunder War and subsequent volumes are set in caves and caverns, reflecting his knowledge of the subject.) He has also recently had a volume of short stories accepted for publication by Acashic. He has also writtern a short film, "Fiddler's Green."

He is not to be confused with Dr Hal K. Colebatch who was born in 1944, has taught political science at several universities, and is also the author of a number of books. Hal G. P. Colebatch originally wrote under the by-line "Hal Colebatch" but changed this to "Hal G. P. Colebatch" to minimise confusion. ..