Growing up in Sydney in the 1960s, Lark Watter dreams only of escape. When she meets handsome American Tom at university she thinks she's found her ticket out. But as Lark embarks on the adventure of a lifetime, following Tom to New York by freighter, all is not as she had imagined it would be . . .
Glenda Adams was born in Sydney in 1939. In 1964 she moved to New York to study journalism at Columbia University, then worked as a journalist at the Associated Press and the United Nations.
In the 1970s Adams produced the short-story collections Lies and Stories and The Hottest Night of the Century, and began teaching fiction writing courses at Columbia University and Sarah Lawrence College.
Her first novel, Games of the Strong, appeared in 1982; but it was Dancing on Coral—which won the 1987 Miles Franklin Award, and was praised by Elizabeth Jolley, Marion Halligan and Kate Grenville— that cemented her reputation.
Adams lived and taught mainly in the United States until 1990, when she returned to Sydney and began lecturing in creative writing at the University of Technology. That year Longleg, shortlisted for the Miles Franklin Award, was published. Her fourth and final novel was The Tempest of Clemenza (1996).
Glenda Adams returned frequently to the United States to teach at Columbia, and to visit her daughter, Caitlin, and first grandson. Her second grandson was born shortly before her death in Sydney, in 2007.
Susan Wyndham is the author of Life in His Hands: The True Story of a Neurosurgeon and a Pianist and the editor of My Mother, My Father: On Losing a Parent, which will be published in late 2013. She has been editor of Good Weekend, New York correspondent for the Australian and deputy editor of the Sydney Morning Herald. She is the Herald&;s literary editor.