Q & A with Gideon Haigh – You’ve written 32 books and have contributed to over 70 international publications. Please tell us what has inspired you and led to your success?
I’m not sure I’d claim success; I’ve simply stayed quite busy, and remained interested in and challenged by what I do. My work isn’t just a living. It’s a craft and a trade, at which I’ve consistently wanted to be a little bit better than I was yesterday. Quite simple really.

Can you share a couple of your most exciting experiences?
The exciting experiences are difficult to explain. What most people find exciting – publication, awards, good reviews etc – I don’t. I like the springs of intimacy, where you wrest a hard-won memory from an interviewer, or find a neglected document. Today I looked at the inquest of an 18yo girl who died in 1929 from a botched abortion, whose body was found in a culvert in Langwarrin. It brought a tear to my eye to feel so connected to a figure so forgotten; I thought of her family’s grief; her friends’ guilt; the hideous trap of shame and ignorance. In the context of the book I’m writing I can give that death some belated meaning. It’s a kind of honour.
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