Contents indexed selectively.
'Henry Handel Richardson (the pseudonym for Ethel Florence Lindesay Richardson, 1870–1894, Mrs J. G. Robertson, 1895–1946) liked nothing better than to sit behind closed doors and play with words. Behind closed doors, adhering to a strict working regime, Richardson wrote six novels, fifteen short stories and sixteen articles, composed music and translated works from Danish and Norwegian. At the time of her death she left an unfinished novel “Nick and Sanny” and an unfinished autobiography. Following strict orders left by HHR, her companion, secretary, friend and—following HHR’s death—literary executor, Olga Roncoroni destroyed the unfinished novel and a large number of letters, both those written by HHR and a lifetime of letters from fellow writers and readers, as well as press cutting books. Her unfinished autobiography was not consigned to the flames,1 but was recognised as a significant record of the life of this very private writer and therefore spared the same fate.' (Introduction)
'Matthew Flinders’s major work, A Voyage to Terra Australis: Undertaken for the Purpose of Completing the Discovery of that Vast Country, and Prosecuted in the Years 1801, 1802, and 1803, in His Majesty’s Ship the Investigator, appeared in 1814, eleven years after the voyage it describes finished, and just days before he died. Although it has now become a canonical work in Australian history and a copy of the first edition is a highly-prized and expensive investment, at the time it was published it did not sell well. 1 The moment had passed—during the intervening decade Napoleon had crowned himself Emperor and made a battleground of the whole of Europe, and the distant activities of a surveying expedition must have seemed irrelevant to many who had been confronted with these more urgent and proximate events. As Ingleton points out, in respect of Flinders’s prospects of promotion or financial support while writing the Voyage, “the war had been long and relentless, and promotion came when vacancies occurred.… Possibly the lords commissioners of the Admiralty were beginning to consider that Flinders had been rewarded sufficiently for the explorations and surveys he had made so long ago.' (Introduction)