Day Break
By (Author) Amy McQuire
Illustrated by Matt Chun
Hardie Grant Children's Publishing
Bright Light Books
6th January 2021
First Edition, Hardback
Australia
Children
Fiction
Childrens / Teenage fiction and true stories
Childrens / Teenage fiction: Family and home stories
Childrens / Teenage personal and social topics: Racism and anti-racism
Hardback
24
Width 275mm, Height 225mm
Day Breakis the story of a family making their way back to Country on January 26. We see the strength they draw from being together, and from sharing stories as they move through a shifting landscape.
The story refocuses the narratives around Australia Day on Indigenous survival and resistance, and in doing so honours the past while looking to the future. Confronting yet truthful, painful yet full of hope,Day Breakis a crucial story that will open up a conversation on truth-telling for the next generation.
Amy McQuire is a Darumbal and South Sea Islander woman from Rockhampton in Central Queensland.Amy is a freelance writer and journalist, and iscurrently completing a PhD at the University of Queensland into media representations of violence against Aboriginal women. Amy began hercareer straight out of high school, completing a cadetship at the National Indigenous Times (NIT) newspaper. Shelater became editor of NIT, and for a short time political correspondent for NITV News.Amyhas also worked at Tracker Magazine,New Matilda, Brisbanes 98.9 FM where shepresented the Lets Talk current affairs show and morerecently BuzzFeed News Australia.
Over the past four years, Amy hasco-hosted the investigative podcast Curtain with human rights lawyer Martin Hodgson. The podcast puts forth the case for innocence for Aboriginal man Kevin Henry, who was wrongfully convicted in 1992. Amy hasa strong interest in writing about justice, culture and heritage and feminism.
Matt Chun is an artist and writer, currently based on stolen Tsleil-Waututh land in the settler colonial state of Canada. He also divides his time between Naarm/Melbourne, Yuin land, and Taipei. His work spans drawing, text, comics and picture books. Matt is a current Research Fellow at the State Library of Victoria, working towards the decolonisation of childrens literature. He is also recipient of 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Arts Writers Program. Hiswriting can be found in Overland Literary Journal, Meanjin Quarterly, Runway Journal and Liminal Magazine. He is currently writing for Art Monthly Australasia.
Matt is the author of picture books Australian Birds (2018), Australian Sea Life (2019) and the forthcoming Australian Mammals (2020), in collaboration with Little Hare Books.