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Not THAT kind of hero!

As writers of fiction we conjure up heroes on a regular basis.

I don’t use the word hero loosely, and unlike the media and certain sports commentators, I don’t attach the ‘hero’ label to just anyone.

Today I did.

Today I heard from two very different types of heroes who told me about even more real-life heroes:

  1. those generous people who have planned to say ‘OK’ to organ and tissue donation to save lives, and
  2. those who say ‘OK’ to donating despite grieving the unexpected loss of a loved one.

In the name of research for book three – Season of Temperance – I attended a presentation by North Coast Area Health’s Organ and Tissue Donation Nurse, Anne Judd, and liver transplant recipient, Adam Gilmore.

As Anne explained the role of a country-based organ and tissue donation coordinator to  the audience of mainly sexagenarians (and I am probably being generous there) I became aware of the depth and breadth of a role that exposes her to extremes: grief, anger, joy, fear, limitations, legalities, timeframes and clinical decision-making…

Wow! I will never complain about having a desk job again.

Then there was Adam.

Hero?

You bet. What this man and his family endured sounded too unreal to be true. Sadly there are too many more just like him.

What a story Adam had to tell.

How did I feel after listening?

Blessed and baffled – baffled that last year Australia had only 337 organ donations, while 1,700 waited on lists. Sadly, 20% of those waiting died without receiving a transplant.

More than anything, and most importantly, I was inspired to spread the ‘donate life’ message – hence my blog post.

Okay, I hear you! You are alive and well. What can you do? (After all, one can only “rip our heart from our chests” in fiction books – right?)

Let me tell you what you can do right now:

  1. Inform yourself on the subject and make the choice that is right for you. Get the facts, dispel the myths, be inspired – www.donatelife.gov.au
  2. Start the conversation with family (parents and children) so they understand your choice.
  3. Register your decision on the Australian Organ Donor Register and encourage friends to do the same.

Do it today, tomorrow, next week. But do it. Please.

Just click here to Donate Life online.

Now share this with your friends.

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Helene Young Book Giveaway

I’m as happy as a cow with a mouthful of cud!

WHY? Because I have the pleasure of hosting multi-award winning author (and friend), Helene Young, when she visits sunny Coffs Harbour for library chats next month. (More on Helene below).

 

And for you, I have a copy of Helene’s latest release, Burning Lies, to give away on this blog.

HOW TO WIN**

Leave a comment. Tell me something that means ‘small town life’ to you – quaint, quintessential, quirky country characters, etc. Or, if you are better with pictures than words, you can ‘like‘ me and post a picture on my Facebook Author Page. (In fact, feel free to ‘like’ my author page anyway. The more the merrier!)

Give it some thought. Take your time. Deadline is Monday 27 July 2012. Winner announced here and on my Author Page.**

ABOUT HELENE YOUNG

Helene, Senior Check and Training Captain with Australia’s largest regional airline, lives near Cairns (that slice of paradise on the edge of the Great Barrier Reef in North Queensland) with her husband and their dog, a slightly obsessive Staffordshire Bull Terrier named Zeus; yet she finds the view from the cockpit as she flies over rural communities is what inspires her to use regional settings rather than cities for her novels.

Burning Lies is the third fabulous book in her Border Watch series.

LIBRARY CHAT

Hear Helene talk about her life and work at the Coffs Harbour City Library on Tuesday, 7th August –  5:30 for a 6:00pm start. For more info and to book.

www.heleneyoung.com

**Open to Australian residents only. Entry deadline Friday 27 July 2012. Winner announced here. Deadline to be extended to 6 August 2012.

Thanks to everyone who commented here and on Facebook. I put all your names in a hat (yes, an Akubra of course) and drew out the name Raelene Hall. Congratulations Raelene. I will let Helene know. Please email me your postal address: jennifersmcleod (at) hotmail (dot) com

 

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Picture it. Win it.

I love pictures of the country.

I forgot all about this photo. (Well, it was a while ago!) I can’t even remember exactly where it was but I snapped it, dreaming about living in the country and one day telling country stories.

Twenty-five years later I am living that dream, writing my small town stories on a small property in regional NSW. And I reckon this photos says come home to the country”.

My next blog post will invite you to share what characterises small town life to you, with every comment going into a draw to win an autographed copy of Helene Young’s latest novel, Burning Lies. (You can even post a pic if you are better with a camera than a pen! I will tell you now.)

Like me, Helene chooses wonderful regional settings for her stories. With Burning Lies it is the Atherton Tablelands – a sprawling farming area to the west of Cairns, which the senior Captain for Australia’s largest regional airline says is inspiring, both on the ground and from the air. “The abundance of abandoned airfields from the war era, the scattered population, and vast tracks of undeveloped wilderness lends itself to a suspenseful, rich and compelling love story.”Burning Lies cover

So my friends – country and city – start thinking about that perfect small town (real or imaginary, as a picture or in words) and pop back here next week (19th) for your chance to win Burning Lies.