Paul Harmon is a writer and filmmaker based in Sydney, Australia. A graduate of the Australian Film and Television School, he spent thirty years as a multi-award-winning director across feature films, high-end television drama, and documentary — working extensively across Australia and Asia.
He brings to his writing the same instinct for narrative drive and moral complexity that shaped his filmmaking career. He was the developmental editor of two novels published by major traditional publishers, an apprenticeship that gave him a forensic understanding of what makes prose work and what makes it stall.
His debut novel Seven Treasures — a literary historical novel set in occupied France and present-day Provence — examines complicity, looted art, and the uncomfortable question of which victims we choose to see. It holds a 4.5 star rating on Amazon. His memoir I Never Sang for My Father, currently seeking its first readers, chronicles a lifetime of reckoning with a domineering father — told through the lens of a life-changing year on the hippie trail to India in 1971. Written with unflinching honesty and without the comfort of easy resolution.
He volunteers as a counsellor at Lifeline, Australia's national crisis support service.