Jeremy Fisher (author)
Jeremy Fisher, (born 9 November 1954) in Te Ahora, New Zealand and was an Executive Director of the Australian Society of Authors (ASA). He is a writer and worked in publishing for 30 years. His best-known novel is Perfect Timing.
Career[edit]
Fisher is openly gay and has been an advocate for gay rights in Australia since 1973.[1] In 1973 he became the centre point of The Pink Ban.[2]
By 1978 he was a member of the New South Wales Labor Party in the Glebe branch.[3]
He was awarded the inaugural medal of the Australian Society of Indexers for his index to the fourth edition of the Australian Encyclopaedia in 1984.[4]
He was appointed President of the NSW Society of Editors in 1986.
In 2007, Fisher was awarded a grant by the Literature Board of the Australia Council for the Arts to develop a work of literary non-fiction.[4] In 2008 he was shortlisted for the Calibre Prize for Best Essay offered by Australian Book Review. The ASA is the peak body representing Australia's literary creators.[5] As an advocate for authors, Fisher was instrumental in the establishment of the Prime Minister's Literature Prizes by the new Labor government of Kevin Rudd in December 2007.[6]
Fisher has been a judge for the Walkley Awards non-fiction book in 2006, 2007 and 2008.