Ross Andrew FitzgeraldAM (born in 1944) is an Australian academic, historian, novelist, secularist, and political commentator. Fitzgerald is an Emeritus Professor in History and Politics at Griffith University. He has authored or co-authored forty-five books, including three histories of Queensland, two biographies, works about Labor Party politics of the 1950s, with other books relating to philosophy, alcohol and Australian Rules football, as well as ten works of fiction, including nine political/sexual satires about his corpulent anti-hero Professor Dr Grafton Everest.
In 2018 Ross Fitzgerald published the Grafton Everest sexual/political satire So Far, So Good : An entertainment. In 2019, he published the Grafton Everest adventure The Dizzying Heights and in March 2020, his memoir Fifty Years Sober. In November 2021 he published the eighth Grafton Everest adventure, The Lowest Depths. All these books are published by Hybrid in Melbourne.
Fitzgerald is a recovery alcoholic who admitted in his memoirs, My Name is Ross: An Alcoholic's Journey and Fifty Years Sober, to consuming excessive alcohol between the ages of 15 and 24 years, when he took his last drink.[1] He has now been sober for 54 years.
Born in Melbourne, Victoria on Christmas Day 1944, Fitzgerald was awarded his PhD in political theory from the University of New South Wales. His academic career has included appointments at Griffith University as a Lecturer between 1977 and 1986, a Senior Lecturer/Associate Professor between 1987 and 1996, and a Personal Chair between 1996 and 2002. In 2002 Fitzgerald was appointed as Professor in History and Politics.
During his time as an Australian Research Council Senior Research Fellow from 1992 to 1996, as well as writing two political biographies Professor Fitzgerald co-produced two ABCTV documentaries, also about E.G. ("Red Ted") Theodore and Australia's only Communist Party member of parliament, Fred Paterson.
In addition to his academic and political commentary appointments, Fitzgerald has served as the Chair of Centenary of Federation Queensland between 1999 and 2002, a Judge of the Prime Minister's Literary Award for Non Fiction and Australian History, a member of the New South Wales Civil and Administrative Tribunal (NCAT) from 2012 to 2016, a member of the Australian Government's Expert Advisory Group on Drugs and Alcohol between 2000 and 2013, a member of the New South Wales Heritage Council between 2003 and 2009, a member of the New South Wales Parole Board between 2002 and 2012, a member of Administrative Decisions Tribunal of New South Wales between 2002 and 2012, and a member of the Queensland Parole Board between 1997 and 2002.
In 2014 Fitzgerald as appointed a Member in the Order of Australia (AM) for significant service to education in the field of politics and history as an academic, and to community and public health organisations.[6] His 2015 book, Going out backwards: a Grafton Everest adventure was shortlisted for the 2017 Russell Prize for Humour Writing.[citation needed]
Published works
Fitzgerald has published 46 books, including the following titles:[7]
Fitzgerald, Ross (1979). The sources of hope. Pergamon Press Australia. ISBN978-0-08-023104-4.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1980). Comparing political thinkers. Pergamon Press. ISBN978-0-08-024799-1.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1987). All about anthrax. Hale & Iremonger. ISBN978-0-86806-272-3.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Thornton, Harold (1989). Labor in Queensland: from the 1880s to 1988. University of Queensland Press (published 1988). ISBN978-0-7022-2152-1.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1990). Busy in the fog: further adventures of Grafton Everest. Macmillan. ISBN978-0-7329-0202-5.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Spillman, Ken, eds. (1989). The Greatest game. William Heinemann Australia (published 1988). ISBN978-0-85561-270-2.
Fitzgerald, Ross, ed. (1993). The Eleven deadly sins. Minerva. ISBN978-0-85561-483-6.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1994). "Red Ted": the life of E. G. Theodore. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-2649-6., which was short-listed for the NSW Premier's Prize and for the National Biography Award.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Allen, Davida; Swan, Robbie (1994). Soaring. Angus & Robertson. ISBN978-0-207-18348-5., awarded the Eros Foundation erotic novel of the year in 1994.[citation needed]
Fitzgerald, Ross, ed. (1995). The eleven saving virtues. Minerva. ISBN978-1-86330-463-4.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1996). The footy club: inside the Brisbane Bears. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-2904-6.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1997). The people's champion, Fred Paterson: Australia's only Communist Party Member of Parliament. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-2959-6., about Fred Paterson.
Fitzgerald, Ross (1999). Seven days to remember: the first Labor government in the world: Queensland, 1-7 December 1899. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-3139-1.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Moore, Keith (2002). The federation mirror: Queensland 1901-2001. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-3328-9.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Carr, Adam James; Dealy, William J. (2003). The Pope's battalions: Santamaria, Catholicism and the Labor split. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-3389-0.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Moor, Lyndal, eds. (2008). Growing old (dis)gracefully: 35 Australians reflect on life over 50. ABC Books. ISBN978-0-7333-2267-9.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Megarrity, Lyndon; Symons, David (2009). Made in Queensland: a new history. University of Queensland Press. ISBN978-0-7022-3661-7.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Blainey, Anna E.; Jordan, Trevor L.; Rakvin, Christine (2009). Under the influence: a history of alcohol in Australia. ABC Books. ISBN978-0-7333-2301-0.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Holt, Stephen (2010). Alan "the Red Fox" Reid: pressman par excellence. New South Books. ISBN978-1-74223-132-7.
Fitzgerald, Ross (2010). My name is Ross: an alcoholic's journey. New South Books. ISBN978-1-74223-102-0.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Jordan, Trevor Leslie (2011). Fools' paradise: life in an altered state. Arcadia. ISBN978-1-921509-58-2. ISSN1836-9413.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Murphy, Rick (2011). Austen Tayshus: merchant of menace. The GHR Press. ISBN978-0-86806-719-3.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Spillman, Ken, eds. (2013). Australia's game: stories, essays, verse & drama inspired by the Australian game of football. Richmond, Victoria: Slattery Media Group. ISBN978-0-9875002-0-5., a book about Australian rules football.
Fitzgerald, Ross; McFadyen, Ian (27 November 2018). Going out backwards: a Grafton Everest adventure. Ormond, Victoria: Hybrid Publishers (published 2015). ISBN978-1-925272-10-9. Going out backwards was shortlisted for the 2017 Russell Prize for Humour Writing.
Reid, Alan Douglas (May 2015). Fitzgerald, Ross (ed.). The Bandar-log: a Labor story of the 1950s. Brisbane, Queensland: Connor Court Publishing (published 2015). ISBN978-1-925138-52-8.
Fitzgerald, Ross, ed. (2016). Heartfelt Moments in Australian Rules Football. Connor Court Publishing. ISBN978-1-9251-3894-8.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Funnell, Antony (2018). So Far, So Good : An Entertainment. Hybrid Publishers. ISBN978-1-9252-7297-0.
Fitzgerald, Ross; McFadyen, Ian (2019). The Dizzying Heights. Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne. ISBN978-1-9257-36304.
Fitzgerald, Ross (2020). Fifty Years Sober: An Alcoholic's Journey. Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne.
Fitzgerald, Ross; McFadyen, Ian (2021). The Lowest Depths: The Eighth in The Grafton Everest series. Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne.
Fitzgerald, Ross; Price, Neal (2023). My Last Drink: 32 Stories of Recovering Alcoholics. Connor Court, Brisbane.
Fitzgerald, Ross; McFadyen, Ian (2023). Pandemonium: The Ninth in The Grafton Everest series. Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne.
Fitzgerald, Ross; McFadyen, Ian (2024). The Ascent of Everest. Hybrid Publishers, Melbourne.
Television and film documentaries
Dawson, Jonathan; Laughren, Pat; Fitzgerald, Ross (Producers) (April 1996). The Legend of Fred Paterson. ABC TV.
Laughren, Pat; Fitzgerald, Ross (Producers) (August 1995). Red Ted and the Great Depression. ABC TV.
In development
Price, Neal; Fitzgerald, Ross (Producers). Last Drinks.
Laughren, Pat; Fitzgerald, Ross (Producers). Stories from the Great Labor Split of the 1950s.
McFadyen, Ian; Fitzgerald, Ross (Producers). Alexander Kerensky and Nelle Tritton.