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- Kathy Lette (born 11 November 1958) is an Australian author who has written a number of bestselling books. Born in Sydney's southern suburbs, she first attracted attention in 1979 as the coauthor of Puberty Blues, a strongly autobiographical, proto-feminist teen novel about two 13-year-old southern suburbs girls attempting to improve their social status by ingratiating themselves with the "Greenhill gang" of surfers. The book was made into a successful movie in 1981. As an adult, Lette became a newspaper columnist and sitcom writer, but returned to the novel form with Girls' Night Out in 1988 and has since written several more successful novels and plays, including Foetal Attraction, Mad Cows in 1996 (which was made into a film starring Joanna Lumley and Anna Friel) and Dead Sexy. Despite her stereotyping of English people as condescending and unfriendly, and her perceived dislike of men, Lette lives in London and is married to a fellow Australian expatriate, the "silk", television host and author Geoffrey Robertson QC, whom she first met when appearing on his Hypotheticals panel debate show. They have two children, Julius and Georgina. She was earlier married to Kim Williams, now Chief Executive Officer of Foxtel, while he was CEO of the Australian Film Commission. In 2007, Lette joined Sunrise as a London correspondent a part of the Global Notebook; she kept this position until mid 2007. With Imogen Edwards-Jones, Lette edited an anthology by prominent women writers of erotic short-stories, In Bed with... (2009), including contributions from Louise Doughty, Esther Freud, Ali Smith, Joan Smith and Fay Weldon, each publishing under a pseudonym. In April 2009, Lette contributed to the fourth issue of the literary magazine Notes from the Underground with a piece honoring her close friend John Mortimer. Lette teamed up with Radox to write a water resistant book, which was released free online in September 2009, with an aim to encourage women to be selfish with their time.
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