Ken Blanch

Ken Blanch

About

Born in Sydney, Australia. Began my 53-year-career as a journalist in Grafton, NSW, and moved to Brisbane, Qld, in 1949 after finishing my cadetship on the Daily Telegraph in Sydney. I didn't know it at the time, but the move to The Telegraph in Brisbane opened a door that admitted me to a box seat from which I could watch, and at times become involved in, 50 years of fascinating Queensland history.

During my career, I worked for all the major Brisbane newspapers interspersed with a few years in the Australian Army, service in Vietnam, and even a stint in television. I was heavily involved in the Australian Journalists' Association as honorary secretary and twice as president.

After retiring at 70, I have returned to investigate some of the murders I covered and published those stories as part of Jack Sim's Classic Crimes series. I have now initiated my own self-publishing venture, Seagle Crime Stories. In these small, reasonably priced books, I review some of Queensland's unsolved disappearances and murders. The first is Marjorie Norval: The Girl a Railway Station Swallowed, about the mysterious disappearance of a woman from Brisbane's Central railway station in November, 1938.

Breaking Through the Spiral Ceiling: An American Woman Becomes a DNA Scientist

Breaking Through the Spiral Ceiling: An American Woman Becomes a DNA Scientist

0.0
0 ratings

Description

Laura Hoopes takes you along as she tries to enter science in the 1960's in the post-Sputnik science education frenzy, only to find doors closed to women.  She persists, makes a career of molecular gerontology and insists on making space for marriage and children in her life.  This inspiring read says, "Yes, you can," to women who have dreams of their own.

Story Behind The Book

Reviews