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Australian writer
Jason Nahrung (born 1968) is an Australian
horror author and journalist who lives in
Melbourne with his partner
Kirstyn McDermott. Nahrung has previously written for
The Courier-Mail newspaper in Queensland, with a special interest in
speculative fiction and horror-related topics.
[1] He was co-winner the 2005
William Atheling Jnr award for Criticism or Review.
[2] His first novel,
The Darkness Within (based on an unpublished novella co-written with Mil Clayton), was published in June 2007 by
Hachette Livre in Australia.
[3] Nahrung has also published some horror and speculative fiction short stories.
Bibliography
Novels
Short stories
- "Watermarks", (2014), Cosmos magazine.
- "The Preservation Society", (2014), Dimension6, Coeur de Lion.
- "The Mornington Ride", (2012), Epilogue,
Tehani Wessely (
FableCroft Publishing).
- "Hello Kitty", (2012), Midnight Echo No. 8.
- "The Last Boat to Eden", (2012), Surviving the End, Dark Prints Press.
- "The Kiss", (2012), Tales from the Bell Club.
- "Breaking the Wire", (2012),
Aurealis No. 47.
- "An Incident at Portsea, 1967", (2011), After the World: Corpus Christi, Issue 4.
- "Messiah on the Rock", (2011), Anywhere but Earth, Coeur de Lion.
- "Children of the Cane", (2011), Dead Red Heart, Ticonderoga Publications.
- "Wraiths", (2011), Winds of Change, CSFG.
- "Resurrection in Red", (2011), More Scary Kisses,
Ticonderoga Publications.
- "Wet Work", (2011), After the Rain, ed.
Tehani Wessely (
FableCroft Publishing).
- "Smoking, Waiting for the Dawn", (2008), Dreaming Again,
HarperVoyager.
- "The Refugee", (2007), Fantastical Journeys to Brisbane.
- "Kadimakara and Curlew", (2007), Daikaiju 2,
Agog! Press.
- reprinted in Australian Dark Fantasy and Horror Vol.3.
- "Pain Threshold", (2006), Agog! Ripping Reads,
Agog! Press.
- "Time to Write", (2005)
The Devil in Brisbane.
- "Triage", (2005), Sf-envision.
- "Night Watch", (2005), Elsewhere,
CSFG Publishing.
- "Spare Parts", (2003), Glimpses.
- reprinted in Devil Dolls and Duplicates in Australian Horror (2011).
- "Prime Cuts", (2002),
Antipodean SF.
- "Summer Haze", (2001), Visions.
Awards
Wins
Nominations
Honourable mentions
Reviews
Notes
References
External links