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Max Sollitt was born in Geelong in 1927 but grew up in the eastern suburbs of
Sydney. He narrowly escaped death at the age of five after contracting diptheria
in a Bondi orphanage, then after leaving school at the age of sixteen contracted
hip-disease and was strapped to a frame in The Prince Henry Hospital for six
months. He recovered enough, however, to join the Merchant Navy as a radio officer
in 1946, where he began to write short stories and newspaper feature articles
when off watch, his first story published in 1948 and first article a year later.
Since then he has had many stories and articles published as well as some poetry,
and actually worked as a freelance journalist for some years after leaving the
sea in 1962. His novel The Correspondence Course was published by Zaresky Press
in 2001.
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