Nam Le (b. 1978) came to Australia as a baby with his Vietnamese refugee parents. He graduated in Arts/Law from the University of Melbourne and worked briefly as a lawyer before moving to the USA to complete a creative writing degree at the renowned Iowa Writers' Workshop. His first book, the collection of short stories The Boat (2008), attracted favourable reviews around the world. It won the Dylan Thomas Prize, the world’s most lucrative literary award for a writer from any country under the age of thirty, the New South Wales and Queensland Premiers' Literary Awards and the Prime Minister's Literary Award. Credited with reviving publishers' faith in the short story, it been translated into fourteen languages. One reviewer wrote in 2014 that 'if all Le ever publishes is The Boat he'll still be a star'.
Rozalind Drummond's portrait of Le was taken on a summer evening in a non-descript place underneath the junction of Footscray Road, the City Link tollway and the Docklands Highway in Melbourne. The location reflects Drummond's interest in capturing the relationship of people to the urban environment with a lightness of touch and sense of empathy.
Purchased 2010
© Rozalind Drummond
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