Brett McBean

Brett McBean is best known as an award-winning Australian horror, thriller and speculative fiction writer. He was born and raised in Melbourne. He is also a drummer and has an Advanced Diploma from Box Hill College of Music

Brett McBean
BornDecember 1978
Melbourne, Australia
OccupationWriter
Period2002
GenreHorror fiction, thriller fiction, speculative fiction
Notable worksThe Mother, Wolf Creek: Desolation Game
Website
brettmcbean.com

McBean's novel The Mother was nominated as the "Best Novel" for the 2007 Ditmar Awards (where he was also nominated as "Best New Talent"), a Ned Kelly Award for "Best Novel" of 2007, a 2007 Aurealis Award for "Best Novel," and it received a 2006 honorable mention by the Australian Shadows Awards. His short story collection Tales of Sin and Madness won the 2011 Australian Shadows Award for "Best Collection".[1]

He also has a keen interest in true crime, in particular the infamous Jack the Ripper murders of 1888. He runs a Jack the Ripper website, Saucy Jacky,[2] in which he reviews Ripper movies and literature, and shares his thoughts about popular suspects and Ripper victims.

Selected bibliography

Novels

  • Wolf Creek: Desolation Game (2014, Penguin Books Australia, co-written with Greg McLean)
  • The Awakening (2012, Tasmaniac Publications)
  • The Mother (2006, Lothian Books)
  • The Last Motel (2002, Wild Roses Productions/2005, Biting Dog Press) (2011, LegumeMan Books updated edition)

Novellas and novelettes

  • Buk and Jimmy Go West (2013, LegumeMan Books)
  • Dead Tree Forest (2011, Delirium Books)
  • "Jungle" trilogy (Concrete Jungle / Neighbourhood Jungle / Suburban Jungle 2010, 2011, 2013, Tasmaniac Publications)
  • The Familiar Stranger (2006, Necessary Evil Press)

Short story collections

  • Tales of Sin and Madness (2008, Thunderstorm Books) (2010, LegumeMan Books updated edition)

Articles

References

  1. "Australian Shadows Award winners 2011". Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
  2. "Saucy Jacky website".
  3. "Article for the Australian Horror Writers Association, 13th October, 2006". Archived from the original on 11 November 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
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