In Italy Italy has a strong tradition in collaborative fiction: the most remarkable texts being '''', a 1929 collective novel by the
futurist team "Gruppo dei Dieci",
Don Milani's Scuola di Barbiana experiment,
Lettera a una professoressa (1967), the various historical best-sellers produced by the
Wu Ming collective between 1999 and 2011, and
In territorio nemico, the 115-author novel realized within the SIC – project founded by Gregorio Magini and , which established a codified methodology for the collective production of literary texts.
In Australia Australia has a number of famous writing teams. In 1944
James McAuley and
Harold Stewart collaborating as
Ern Malley wrote seventeen poems in one day as a hoax against
Max Harris and his magazine
Angry Penguins. From the late 1920s to the late 1940s
Flora Eldershaw and
Marjorie Barnard wrote under the name of
M. Barnard Eldershaw. During that time they published a body of work that included five novels. Evidently Barnard did more of the actual writing whilst Eldershaw concentrated on development and structure of the works.
Louise Elizabeth Rorabacher who wrote about the collaboration stated: "that in their early collaborative novels it is impossible to distinguish their separate contributions." The partnership worked because according to
Nettie Palmer, a leading literary critic of the time: "Any difference in the characters of the two women doesn't make for a difference in their point of view or values."
Dymphna Cusack wrote twelve novels, two of which were collaborations. She wrote
Come In Spinner, a novel set in Sydney during the end of World War II, with
Florence James. The completed book was submitted and won the 1948
Daily Telegraph novel competition. Cusack also collaborated with another writer –
Miles Franklin on the 1939 novel
Pioneers on Parade. Between 1997 and 2000, Australian children's authors,
Paul Jennings and
Morris Gleitzman, co-wrote two series of children's books,
Wicked and
Deadly. This tradition has continued into the 21st century. The 2015 Australian outback novel The Painted Sky was written by a group of five Australian women, and its 2017 sequel The Shifting Light' by four authors who collaboratively write under the pseudonym
Alice Campion. Their unique writing process has resulted in critics applauding their "single" author voice. As 'Group Fiction', three of the collective have also written a guide to collaborative fiction writing called How to Write Fiction as a Group. In 2020, novelist
Craig Cormick collaborated with Indigenous Australian writer Harold Ludwick to write an
alternative history novel,
On a Barbarous Coast, about
Captain Cook's 1768-1771 voyage to Australia. == Community and educational uses ==